Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 12 – One of the more intriguing consequences of Vladimir Putin’s attacks
on Ukraine was that as Russians became more hostile to Ukrainians, they appeared
to cut back the level of hostility toward non-Russians within their own country
both in terms of what they told pollsters and regarding how they behaved.
Now,
something analogous may be happening. Growing hostility among Russians toward
the Russian government is reducing the relative significance of their hostility
toward non-Russians, opening the possibility that there may be greater
cooperation across ethnic lines and the danger that the Kremlin will try to do
something to prevent that from happening.
According
to a new TSIRKON poll, 45 percent of Russians say the greatest “contradiction”
in their country today is between the population and the government, with 42
identifying that between rich and poor, figures far higher than for any other
factor, Kommersant reports (kommersant.ru/doc/3881470).
Only 24 percent
see the largest “contradiction” being between those of different political
views, only 16 percent between those of different nationalities, and only 13
percent between longtime residents and recent arrivals, including migrants, the
poll found. In short, as hostility to the
regime has increased, hostility toward other groups has been eclipsed.
Three out of four in the sample said
they are “ready to unity with other people for joint actions if their ideas and
interests correspond.” But 65percent
said one had to be “careful” in dealing with others, and 57 percent said the
population remains divided along many lines, TSIRKON analysts said media
reporting on conflicts had helped produce this situation.
Until recently, the paper quotes
Sergey Obukhov of the KPRF Central Committee, Russian society, having become
radically individualistic and even anomic, was united by Vladimir Putin given
that “all other social-political institutions had been devalued.” But now even
that unifying factor is breaking down, opening the way to conflicts old and
new.
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