Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 18 – By organizing what
he calls the anti-Russian and anti-Orthodox demonstrations in Yekaterinburg,
Igor Romanov says, the West is trying to split Russia along the Urals mountains,
an effort that threatens to spark a civil war and that requires Moscow name a
governor general to maintain control in the Russian Far East.
The head of the Vladivostok-based Shores
of Russia Center for Church-State Relations blames the US consulate in
Yekaterinburg for the protests and is using them to split Russia in two parts.
Worse, he says, the US is using its embassy and consulates everywhere to do the
same (beregrus.ru/?p=12179).
But the immediate goal of the Americans,
Romanov says, is to divide Russia along the Urals so that it can then undermine
Russian power and Russian Orthodoxy east of the Urals and take control of that
resource-rich region. He calls for closing
US missions in Russia before it is too late, especially in the Far East where the
Americans feel “still more free than in the Urals.”
Indeed, things are so serious, the Russian
Orthodox nationalist says, Moscow must appoint a governor general for the Far
East as a whole and name military governors in all its krays and oblasts to
ensure that the center does not lose control of the country east of the Urals to
the Americans (beregrus.ru/?p=12181).
Romanov’s language and argument are
extravagant, even if they do reflect his real fears. But others in more
tempered language are talking about the way in which the events in
Yekaterinburg highlight the revival of the differences that existed between
central Russia and Siberia in the 1990s.
The most thoughtful of these is
Konstantin Dzhultayev, a political commentator for the URA news agency, who
argues that “the street protests in Yekaterinburg are only beginning” and that
the divide between the political system Moscow has sought to impose and
Siberian imperatives for a very different one is widening (ura.news/articles/1036278079).
The Yekaterinburg protests, Dzhultayev
says, represent “the destruction of the system of political suppression that
has existed for a decade.” That system functioned when there was no real opposition
and no need for those in power to speak with the people. “But it has not withstood the first clash
with reality.”
“The roots of what has occurred
during this week of protests extend to the end of the 2000s, the period of the destruction
of the political system built in the region by former governor Eduard Rossel,”
the commentator says. He “was able to deal
directly with the population, frequently going out” to talk with those who were
upset with one thing or another.
With Rossel, Dzhultayev continues, “people
had the opportunity to influence the authorities not only via organizing mass
protest actions. They believed that they could influence it via elections, that
the deputies, mayors and even governor elected by them would defend popular aspirations”
– and that power came not just top down but bottom up as well.
At the beginning of this decade, “the
situation both in the region and in the country as a whole changed.”
Gubernatorial elections were done away with, street protests were limited.
Rossel went into retirement, and “real work with the population was replaced by
interactions with formal institutions” that did not have any knowledge of what the
people wanted.
The Yekaterinburg government
continued to have consultations, but everyone knew the fix was in and so with
time, the people stopped having any confidence that they could influence things
except by going into the streets. And
that is what they began to do, sometimes with success and sometimes not but
always with the conviction that there was no other way.
“The unsanctioned protests in May
2019 were the logical extension of the previous ones. As before, the opinion of
those who did not want the church built was something no one in a position of
power wanted to hear in official and legal spaces” and so the population did
what it had to do – and what it had succeeded in doing earlier.
These protests did not have a real
leader, and “the real causes of them were the desire of city residents to be
heard.” Unfortunately, those in positions of authority weren’t prepared to
listen.
Dzhultayev says during the protests,
he met with representatives of the authorities. “The majority of them
acknowledged that they were scared. They admitted that the administrative
mechanisms of influence they were used to were not work on the city’s
population.” They fell back on ideological tropes that have no basis in
reality.
Only Vladimir Putin’s intervention and
suggestion that there be a poll allowed them to feel confident again given that
many protesters went home, but the URA commentator this that this development “will
be temporary.” People now have a way to
get action – and it isn’t via the official organs.
“Already today, opponents of
building the cathedral are saying on social networks that they will have to
resume their protests if they don’t get the results they want from the poll.”
And the new protests will have a far larger agenda than the current ones
because the participants will want those who opposed them removed.
According to Dzhultayev, “the
authorities have only a single way of countering the growing threat: the
complete replacement of the leaders of the domestic political blocks and the
transformation of the organs of power into places for real discussion to which all
interested citizens will have access.” If that doesn’t happen, the protests
will turn on powers that be.
But something bigger will happen as
well: “the Yekaterinburg precedent will bring dangers also to neighboring
regions whose residents certainly will want to use the experience of their
neighbors. Whether this danger is understood in Moscow is still unknown. So
far, the Muscovites are only following the situation because they don’t have a
recipe for its solution.”
If Dzhultayev is right, then Russia
will divide into two parts just as it was in the 1990s, with the Siberian regions
moving in one direction and the Muscovite center in another – something perhaps
not as radical as Romanov thinks but something that would be at least as
consequential.
No comments:
Post a Comment