Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – A group of
communists in Tomsk has announced plans to hold a Siberian Anti-Imperialist
March on September 1 and to promote the revival of oblastnichestvo, as
Siberian regionalism has been historically called even though most oblastniks
in the past were anti-communist (region.expert/siberian_union/).
Igor Kuznetsov, one of the activists
involved, says the upcoming meeting will feature slogans like “For the
Decolonization of the Regions of Russia! Pomorye, Siberia and All Russia
without Garbage! Kadyrov, Hands Off Daghestan and Ingushetia! For the right of
self-determination for Hong Kong and Eastern Turkestan! and For Your Freedom
and Ours!”
He tells Yaroslav Zolotaryev who
tracks regional developments in the Russian Federation that “the Movement
Against Fires in the Taiga, which arose in early August supports us in Siberia.
Liberals are interested in us but all the same are afraid of openly supporting
our demands for the decolonization of the regions of Russia.”
“We want to revive the Union for the
Unification of Siberia as a social-ecological and social-political movement,”
Kuznetsov says. “It was created already in 1990 at the First Potanin Readings
at Tomsk University,” an event he has he took part in. The group was disbanded
in the mid-1990s when it appeared that regional officials were moving in the
right direction.
“But we were mistaken: today these people
in power do not represent Siberians but are Kremlin appointees,” the activist
continues. “Therefore, the movement must be revived.” That is all the more so
because, he says, “Siberia today in fact is becoming a dual colony of Moscow
and Beijing.”
“We stand for decolonization and the
establishment in place of the tsarist-Stalinist-Putinist empire a Confederation
of the Regions and Peoples of Russia,” Kuznetsov declares, saying that the idea
has support in Tomsk, Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk “and even in the Kuban.”
He says that the group is seeking
official permission for the September 1 march but will proceed even if the powers
that be don’t give it. Kuznetsov says he doesn’t fear prosecution for promoting
separatism because he believes that such “persecution will only generate intense
interest in our project.”
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