Paul Goble
Staunton,
January 20 – Something remarkable has occurred in the time since Magnitogorsk:
Kremlin media are now reporting on other lesser technogenic disasters earlier left
entirely to local outlets, and at the same time, the government-controlled
media in the capital are reporting more often about public unhappiness concerning
these infrastructure problems.
But
according to the Forbidden Opinion
Telegram Channel, this is not a sign of a turn to greater media freedom but
rather of something else: By reporting on many technogenic problems, the
Kremlin hopes to prevent Russians from concluding that any of them were the
work of terrorists (charter97.org/ru/news/2019/1/20/320586/).
If there are numerous reports about
gas explosions, the Telegram Channel suggests official thinking goes, Russians
will increasingly assume that there is no basis for suspicions that any of the
disasters were caused by terrorism, a judgment that the Kremlin fears would be
transformed into a finding against the powers that be.
“Putin fears terrorist acts to the
point of panic,” the Chanel continues: they come to him in nightmares together
with dreams about a Russian Maidan and the murder of Qaddafi beause a terrorist
act puts paid all ‘the achievements’ of the country under his leadership
regarding the struggle with terrorism” abroad and at home.
The Kremlin leader is even more worried
about the possibility Russians will conclude that some disaster is the result
of terrorism now that his ratings have fallen so fast and so far. If many
Russians came to believe that this or that disaster was the result of a
terrorist attack, that could in his mind be “the last straw” as far as his
support within the population is concerned.
This suggests that Putin and his
aides have concluded that the situation in the country is far more dire than
many assume and that they could be in serious political trouble that could lead
to radical change in the near future, the Forbidden Opinion Telegram Channel
suggests. Otherwise they wouldn’t take the risk of such additional reporting of
“bad” news.
But there is another risk of more
reporting of bad news, and it is this: once Russians become accustomed to
reading about collapsing apartments and falling bridges, they may begin to
connect the dots and recognize that it isn’t terrorists who are the biggest
threat to their way of life but rather the men in the Kremlin who are trying to
manage the news.
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