Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 24 – Poll results
showing that 74 percent of Yekaterinburg residents opposed having their city
park given over to the Orthodox Church for a cathedral show that city leaders
either didn’t know what the people wanted or caused more of them to come out
against the idea by their own actions, the editors of Nezavisimaya gazeta say.
In either case, the paper says in a
lead article today, this shows the importance of liberalizing laws and
regulations governing social protests because they uniquely provide information
on what the people are thinking and are in fact the norm of a healthy society rather
than a threat (ng.ru/editorial/2019-05-23/1_7580_red.html).
“Public demonstrations against
decisions of the authorities occur throughout the world,” the editors say. “People
may not like the building of a church or mosque, a trade center or elite
housing, a trash dump, a highway or a factory that contaminates the
environment. Their force isn’t an act of force-majeure. It is the life of a
health social organism.”
Unfortunately, this has been lost sight
of in Russia today, the editors continue, because the powers that be are
obsessed with the risk that social protests will grow into political ones and
become a threat to their positions.
Indeed, the Kremlin has made blocking that possibility a major item in
its ratings of governors.
“The border between social and
political protests, and the interests of citizens, the authorities, and the opposition
is subtle,” the paper concedes. “Social protest becomes political when citizens
do not simply make demands but begin to think that they can fulfill them by
replacing those in power.”
Those in power see that as a
constant threat whether it is or not. “The opposition of course has an interest
in having demands for the replacement of the powers that be become as quickly
as possible the leitmotif of any protest.” As for the citizenry, it wants the
problems solved regardless of whether the powers that be are changed or not.
What is dangerous, the editors
suggest, is that officials who act repressively against social protests may be
playing a major role in transforming them into political ones. In Yekaterinburg,
those opposed to the construction of the church went into the streets even when
they knew that there was a risk they’d be arrested.
What that means, the lead article says, is
that the regional leaders and the federal center need to recognize that a more
permissive approach to social pressure is the best means of preventing protests
from growing over from the social to the political, exactly what those in power
say they are concerned about.
Indeed, Nezavisimaya gazeta says, the authorities should recognize that
listening to the population in the first place will keep them from taking
actions that will spark even social protests.
That is the real message of the 74 percent “no” vote in the
Yekaterinburg survey this week.
That may be a tough call for many in
power to make. A new Public Opinion Foundation poll shows that in the regions,
more than half of all residents (56 percent) are dissatisfied with conditions,
the highest level in four years (actualcomment.ru/krizis-regionov-nedovolstvo-rossiyan-dostiglo-maksimuma-za-4-goda-1905241244.html).
The poll found that
popular discontent was lowest in Moscow and the North Caucasus Federal District
and highest in the Far Eastern, Southern, and Volga Federal districts. And it further concluded that “regional
problems are one of the chief drivers of the growth of protest attitudes among
Russians.”
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