Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 15 – Unconfirmed rumors
that some Roma in Penza Oblast had raped a Russian woman have led to armed
clashes between that community and Russians bent on vengeance. Several people have
been hospitalized, and one has died. Officials and Roma leaders have failed to
calm the situation, and Russians are blocking a highway to get wider attention.
As in most such cases, both the
origins of the conflict and its course remain in dispute; but three things are
clear and significant. First, the anger of the local Russian population exceeds
anything that local or regional officials were prepared for. Their appeals for
calm have failed (penzainform.ru/news/incidents/2019/06/14/nachalnik_politcii_oblasti-chemodanovtcam_ya_budu_s_vami_do_kontca.html).
Second, the local Russians are
convinced that only by attracting outside attention are they going to get what
they assume to be justice, something that at least a few of them suggest means
expelling the Roma from their community of Chemodanovka. Oblast officials have now
intervened, but they appear to be having no more success than local ones in
calming things.
And third – and certainly most important
– this effort by local people to raise the stakes in a conflict by drawing in
Moscow is a prime example of an unintended consequence of the Kremlin’s
much-trumpeted announcement that it will rate governors on their ability to keep
the situation in their regions quiet.
The Penza Russians clearly have decided
that they can exploit this situation by calling Moscow’s attention to it,
forcing local and regional officials to back down lest the officials get in
trouble with the center or forcing Moscow to intervene on their behalf,
convinced that the Kremlin will back Russians over Roma.
To the extent that the Penza pogrom
may be a harbinger of similar calculations elsewhere, the events in Chemodanovka
aren’t simply the latest clash between Russians and Roma but an indication of
the ways in which underlying ethnic tensions are interacting with state policy
and making the situation in the Russian Federation more unstable.
No comments:
Post a Comment