Paul Goble
Staunton, October 26 – Protests in
Moscow have quieted down to the point of non-existence, but in three
non-Russian republics – Buryatia, Kalmykia and Sakha – they have broken out
with greater force, in each case providing evidence that “loyalty [to Moscow]
has gone out of fashion,” three experts with whom The New Times spoke
say.
In Kalmykia, people are protesting
Moscow’s imposition as Elista mayor of a Russian who earlier headed the
self-proclaimed DNR in Ukraine. In Buryatia, they are continuing to protest
dishonest elections. And in Sakha, they are showing their support for the shaman
whom the authorities arrested after he declared he would go to Moscow and “expel”
Putin.
The first expert, Aleksey Makarkin,
suggests that the protests in Sakha are small and insignificant and that those
in Buryatia are larger but of a piece of complaints about how elections are
managed, but that the Kalmyk ones are more serious because they reflect how
angry many people are to have outsiders imposed on them (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/186929?fcc
).
The second, Abbas Galyamov, says that
these three protests are “nothing sensational” in themselves but important as
an indication of trends which began more than a year ago. “Protest attitudes
are growing, loyalty is passing out of fashion, the number of conflicts has
increased, and ever more regions are involved.”
This development “does not mean that
the regime will collapse tomorrow, he continues. “No, it still has reserves of
strength,” but the powers that be already now cannot fail to notice or stop “the
erosion of their social base.” As a
result, Galyamov continues, they have shifted from playing offense to playing
defense.
And the
third, Dmitry Oreshkin, says that one must make a distinction between two kinds
of protest, those involving legal issues taken up by those who are better off
and typically very small; and those reflecting the views of a far broader swath
of the population that take the form of “us” versus “them” thinking.
What
people across the Russian Federation are angry about, he suggests, varies
little from place to place, but the constructions people place on these things
depends importantly on ethnicity. “In the national republics, whatever occurs
is viewed through the prism of ethnic protest” something that doesn’t exist in the
case of Moscow.
“For
Russia and for the federal authorities, protests of the second type are a very
serioius problem,” Oreshkin says, “because Russia is a multi-national country
and certain nations live in very much consolidated groups.” And when protests occur in these areas, they
involve not just the educated elite but the masses.
“Ethnic
protest,” he continues, “is more primitive: it is like class protests in 1917, because
it often attracts people who are told that all their problems are the result of
the fact that someone is exploiting them. For example, Muscovites or the
capitalists. And they can kill” as a result.
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