Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 23 – Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, head of Ingushetia, says that opposition
parties capable of doing “something useful” for their native republic don’t
exist because most of them simply consist of former who perhaps should be
described as unsuccessful politicians and officials (gazetaingush.ru/news/evkurov-zayavil-ob-otsutstvii-v-ingushetii-zdorovoy-oppozicii).
But
there is another and much more serious problem in this regard, Radio Svoboda
commentator Ramazan Alpaut points out, and it is this: many in the political
parties and media at the regional level are more focused on what is going on in
Moscow than in what is happening or should be happening in their home republics
or regions (idelreal.org/a/29445660.html).
Thus, for example, activists and the
media in Tatarstan focus, appropriately enough, on the plight of Oleg Sentsov;
but they don’t, in appropriately, mention the cases of political prisoner Danis
Safargali or the forced emigration of Rafis Kashapov, despite the close ties of
both to Kazan.
Activists like Dmitry Semenov, the
deputy head of Open Russia, acknowledge that this problem exists but does not
offer a solution given that only a few cases, like Sentsov’s, attract attention
while others do not. “Unfortunately, we are beginning to treat this pattern as
somehow in the nature of things,” something that he says is “a definite
professional deformation.”
Other political activists are less
sympathetic to calls for more attention to be devoted to local and regional
issues. They say that the battle is at
the center and so it is appropriate that people focus on that. But this means
that regional battles are seldom joined and Russians thus seldom gain the
experience at that level that could be translated to the center.
The media in the regions often is
equally Moscow-centric, allowing officials to go their own way without the
scrutiny they should be subject to and without the population taking seriously
the notion that they have an interest in what regional elites are doing or not
doing, Alpaut continues.
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