Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 22 – The Belarusian Academy of Sciences is working on plans to change
the administrative-territorial divisions of the country, a step that will give Minsk
new opportunities to shift officials around but that is likely to create
bureaucratic confusion and new opportunities for subversion by the Russian
Federation for some years to come.
The
plans are being developed by the Academy’s Institute of Economics, Tatyana
Vertinskaya, one of its scholars, tells Zvyazda because many in Minsk believe
that the current territorial arrangements are far from optimal in terms of
services and development possibilities (zviazda.by/be/node/142805 in Belarusian; charter97.org/ru/news/2018/9/21/306084/
in
Russian).
Today,
she says, “the districts of the country vary by size and by transportation
links to regional centers. Thus, four of the six oblast centers are located
more than 200 kilometers from the center of the country, while 16 district
centers are situated closer to Minsk than to the centers of their own oblasts.”
Vertinskaya
says that the situation has not yet reached a critical state and that she
favors an “evolutionary” approach to changing the existing administrative-territorial
arrangements, on that could be called “a soft path to its improvement.” Under its terms, regions could be combined
with cities, and their governments combined as well.
In
addition, she suggests, it would be a good idea to unify regions with fewer
than 20,000 people with neighboring and larger districts, thereby allowing
Minsk the opportunity to reduce the existing number of regions to 95 to 100 in
place of the far larger number of regions and rural soviets which exist at the
present time.
But
the economist says that there are also those who favor a more radical approach,
one that would transform Belarusian government in fundamental ways. It would
shift the current three-level system (rural soviet, district and oblast) to a
two-level one (region and oblast) thereby eliminating many of the smaller
government units altogether.
Its
implementation would mean the creation of 15 to 18 new super-districts or okrugs
in place of the existing six oblasts, with a reduction in the number of 1300
district and rural soviets to approximately 450 to 475, with a consequent
savings on personnel and greater opportunities for economic development.
Although
Vertinskaya makes no mention of Moscow’s calls for the federalization and
decentralization of neighboring Ukraine, calls that appear intended to weaken
Kyiv and increase Russia’s ability to influence the domestic situation in
Ukraine, the plans in Belarus she mentions would appear to open that country to
a situation in which Moscow might do the same there.
At
the very least, the possibility of such radical administrative-territorial
changes will introduce new uncertainties and even confusion in the Belarusian
government – and in those troubled waters, an outside force that does not wish
Belarus well could easily assume a more menacing form.
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