Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – Ever more
demonstrations and protests are taking place in Russia beyond the ring road
around Moscow, but a large share of the oblasts and republics remain quiescent,
and Kemerovo activist and blogger Vyachesav Chernov says there are few reasons
to think that is going to change.
In a cri de coeur on his blog
that Novyye izvestiya has reposted, the Kemerovo man says that people in
the regions are overwhelmed with the problems of survival and do not see that
any civic action is going to change anything for them or their children (newizv.ru/article/general/26-06-2019/grazhdanskiy-aktivist-provintsiya-spit-i-probuzhdatsya-ne-sobiraetsya).
People in his region
and others like it, Chernov says, simply do not believe that any actions by
themselves will change anything. “The authorities will simply ignore you, the
law enforcement organs will kick you around in a circle, and your fellow
residents will make fun of you for what you are doing.”
Even if
you are fighting for truth and justice and even if you achieve some success
individually, “no one will joint you, no one will write, and no one will
telephone and suggest that we should work together. Instead, everything will
remain just as it was” Russia’s provinces have not risen to the level of public
activity.
“People
in the provinces are occupied with entirely different things,” he says. And “it
is easy to understand the lack of demand for truth in the provinces.” After
long days at poorly paid work, “there is no desire to listen to reports about
trash in Shiyes, the arrest of the unknown Golunov, or watch stories about calls
for freeing of political prisoners in Moscow.”
For such
people, it is much more pleasant to watch how “Putin has outplayed everyone,
how rockets find their targets in Syria and how in Ukraine they are turning off
the gas. The province is sleeping and doesn’t intend to wake up. The Russian
provincial is against only one thing: don’t kill me here and now. But gradually
you can.”
Protests
take time and money, and activists have to come up with most of it in the
provinces. They ask themselves why they should do so given the absence of
public response and given that they could live much better if they stopped
their social activism and spent the money on themselves and their families.
Their
closest allies may live 160 kilometers away, and so there is little mutual
support, Chernov continues.
But what
is especially disturbing, he says, is that a recent visit to Moscow convinces
him that people there aren’t that much different and that there aren’t going to
be any fundamental changes there let along any peaceful revolution. “Moscow doesn’t
provide an example of civic opposition to the ruling mafia and the struggle for
civil rights.”
As a
result, he suggests, “we are in a very lousy position. Before our eyes, an enormous
country which has inexhaustible potential is dying and being transformed into rot,”
a criminal and inhuman result. In this situation, civic activism is “not a
light which illumines the darkness.” Rather, it is an effort to save a dying
ember in the hopes that eventually something will change.
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