Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 24 – Tens of
thousands of Russians in more than 50 cities across Russia came out to defend
Lake Baikal against officials who have been allowing China access not only to the
waters of the lake but also to forests surrounding it, protests that follow the
collection of more than a million signatures on a petition to Putin calling for
Moscow to reverse course.
The largest Russian meetings took
place in Moscow, Kazan, Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk, Nizhevartovsk, Surgut,
Tomsk, Omsk and Samara. They were echoed by demonstrations abroad in
Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, the US, Canada, the UAE, France and Germany,
among others (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/activism/m.275659.html,
echo.msk.ru/news/2394581-echo.html
and sibreal.org/a/29839255.html).
What
powers these protests is the near sacred status of Lake Baikal have for many
Russians and their anger at the Chinese for seeking access to its waters but
even more the fury many feel that their own officials and business community
are selling out Russia’s patrimony for personal profit, a conviction that may
make these meetings a turning point.
Those
attitudes were reflected in the signs people carried – “Baikal is Our
Motherland! The Taiga is Our Home!” “Enough Living by the Principle: We’ll Take
Measures if There’s a Disaster!” and “Preserve Baikal for our Children and
Descendants!” – and in the more than 10,000 additional signatures that were
added to the petition in the Transbaikal alone.
One
of the organizers of the event, Aleksandr Kolotov of The Rivers without Borders”
organization said that “the Russian organs of power are taking decisions
without any social discussion, without any hearings, and supposedly at the requests
of the toilers.” But the people are against what it and China are doing.
The
online petition calls for the creation of presidential social council to
consider issues of water and forest use in the Transbaikal region and to ensure
that profit is not put before environmental protection there.
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