Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 16 – Local, regional
and federal siloviki dispersed Russians who had been blocking a highway in
Penza oblast after clashes between Russians and members of the Roma community
there resulted in injuries and at least one death. The authorities have
arrested 174 people, all of whom are Roma (theins.ru/news/161698 and znak.com/2019-06-14/v_penzenskoy_oblasti_omon_ochistil_federalnuyu_trassu_ot_protestuyuchih).
Federal officials have portrayed
themselves as evenhanded and have even pledged to bring to justice local
Russian officials if the investigation shows that they bore responsibility for
the clashes (nakanune.ru/news/2019/6/16/22544080/). But the way in
which the authorities have behaved will be read by some as meaning that it is
open season on the Roma.
Indeed, some ethnic Russians in
Penza Oblast may have already drawn that conclusion: Last night there was a
large and as yet unexplained fire in the Roman encampment near Chemodanovka. No
one was injured but a great deal of property was damaged (znak.com/2019-06-16/pod_penzoy_proizoshel_krupnyy_pozhar_v_cyganskom_poselke).
For the Russian authorities to tilt
so far in the direction of one ethnic group and against another is
extraordinarily short-sighted and dangerous, commentator Anatoly Nesmiyan who
blogs under the name “El Murid” says in a new post that has been picked up by
others (https://el-murid.livejournal.com/4163246.html; e.g., publizist.ru/blogs/112502/31608/-).
“The current conflict with the Roma
in the village of Chemodanovka in Penza Oblast,” he says, “a conflict which
ended with shooting, is not national and even not ethnic. It is strictly a
clash of two ways of living, which are incompatible with one another,” the
commentator continues.
According to him, the guilty parties
in this case are “exclusively the local powers that be, from police on the beat
to the governor who needed to include the Roma factor in their calculations and
have a clearly designed conception of relations with this unique social
category.”
That the authorities “in general did
not do so, Nesmiyan says, “led to the conflict, the murder and the involvement
of the population which in essence was fulfilling the work of the authorities
but in an extreme manner.” Now, what is certain to happen, he says, is that “unacceptable
conditions” will be created for the Roma and they will be forced to move on.
“Our authorities, unfortunately, are
not able to quickly and effective act in the case of group conflicts be they
communal or ethnic.” And what is still worse is that the Russian law
enforcement bodies find it easier to accuse one side rather than find out and
punish “the real criminals.”
“All this,” Nesmiyan says, “is the
result of the incompetence of officials and officers of law enforcement organs,
itself a reflection of a negative cadres selection. Those who get prompted are not those who honestly
and professionally do their jobs but those who are loyal to the bosses and
powers that be as a whole.”
Although the Russian blogger does not
mention it, there is one even more disturbing aspect of this situation: few
governments including the Russian ever get in much trouble if they attack the
Roma given that all too many regimes have chosen to do so in violation of their
own laws and human rights norms.
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