Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 2 – Ever since elections in the Soviet Union and then the Russian
Federation acquired any real meaning, commentators in both Moscow and the West
have expressed concern about the possibility that the non-Russians will use these
events to promote their own agendas and thus exacerbate ethnic tensions in the
country.
Vladimir
Putin, by banning national and regional parties and by coming down hard even on
regionalist let alone nationalist agendas, has limited the opportunities for non-Russians
to use elections for their own purposes; but a group in the small Turkic
republic of Khakassia shows such groups still have a chance and that Moscow is
worried about it.
Yesterday,
the Khakass Askhyr Youth Organization issued an appeal saying that it wanted
someone of Khakass nationality to run in the November 11 elections rather than
be governed by outsiders or by ethnic Russians who outnumber them almost seven
to one in that republic (nazaccent.ru/content/28564-hakasskie-aktivisty-obyavili-o-poiske-politicheskih.html).
“We
say that we have worthy leaders and representatives of our people who are
completely charismatic and strong personalities who can much better cope with the
responsibilities of the head of the republic than any other variants,” the
Internet appeal continued.
The
group plans to send delegates to various parts of the republic to try to find
such people because “it is possible that the representative of the titular nation
is the best leader.” Others have other motherlands, the appeal says; but “we
have no other. We cannot whatever we want go somewhere else and be comfortable.”
Nine
days from now there will be a second round of the gubernatorial race in
Khakassia because no one won an absolute majority of votes in the first
round. At present, given that all other
candidates have withdrawn, the only remaining candidate is Valentina Konovalova
of the KPRF.
It
might not seem unreasonable to most that local people would want a local
candidate, but because nationality is involved, the reaction of Russians in
Moscow and of their supporters in Abakan has been entirely predictable and
predictably negative. This is “a
dangerous game,” they say (nazaccent.ru/content/28567-opasnaya-igra-na-nacionalnyh-strunah.html).
Local experts, like Abakan’s Tatyana
Abdulova, say that the nationalists are unlikely to succeed. “Khakassia,” they
insist, is “one of the most peaceful regions of the country as far as
inter-ethnic tensions are concerned. But to test these relations in the final
analysis is unrise and can lead to their breakdown.”
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