Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 19 – Soviet rulers
engaged in all kinds of ethnic engineering with regard to non-Russian peoples,
drawing borders in such a way that an ethnic group might be a minority on a
particular territorial entity or be locked together with another ethnic group
allowing Moscow to use a divide-and-rule strategy against them.
But they also used a related kind of
ethnic engineering in Russian areas, dividing up historical or aspirational
regions into smaller oblasts and krays, thus limiting the ability of these
regions to challenge the center. These divisions now are playing an even
greater role in restricting regionalist movements than are non-Russian
territories in blocking nationalist ones.
The reason is simple, Siberian
regionalist Aleksey Manannikov says. In non-Russian republics, the media,
including the official media, focuses on ethnic issues often unique to that
territory thus supporting often unwittingly but effectively republic
identities; but in mostly ethnic Russian areas, the coverage and thus impact of
the media are very different.
There, the former Duma member and
Senator from Novosibirsk says, the media focus on news from the oblast and kray
and on reporting from Moscow but ignore almost completely news about the
broader region such as Siberia in which these territorial units exist. Thus,
they do nothing to promote regional identity and much to undermine it.
Manannikov tells Vadim Shtepa of the
Region.Expert portal that this is one of the most important reasons why
Russians in Russian oblasts and krays talk only about their own area or about
Russia as a whole and why as a result, regionalism has had a far more difficult
time than has nationalism in non-Russian areas. (region.expert/siberia-manannikov/).
Over the last century and a half,
the regionalist says, Siberians have been talked about the idea of an
independent Siberia. “The idea of Siberian sovereignty has never died.” Twice,
in 1918 and then in the early 1990s, it was an idea that appeared ready to
capture the masses and become a real political force.
But in the 19th century,
the expansion of Russian railroads allowed the tsarist authorities to maintain
control over their colony in Siberia, thus crushing the hopes of the oblastniki
who believed that they could achieve independence from European Russia much
as the American states had from Great Britain.
Soviet rulers continued their
campaign to ensure central control over Siberia, not just by changing the mix
of the population but also by dividing up regions there, “each of which was
oriented toward bureaucratic interaction with the metropolitan center and had
only weak horizontal links with others” in Siberia.
These territorial divisions
prevented the Siberian regionalists from having success, Manannikov says. And
what successes the Siberians had were the result of glasnost and the ability of
regionalists to promote a common information space. That was the force behind
the rise of the Siberian Agreement in the 1990s.
Not surprisingly, he argues, “the
empire’s revenge began with the so-called ‘doctrine of information security,”
Putin declared in May 2000. That led to the destruction of almost all media
outlets not tied to the state either in Moscow or in government-defined
territories, including predominantly Russian ones, elsewhere.
“The all-Siberian press by the middle of
the first decade of this century practically disappeared. What remained was
only the imperial information space and regional information units which
combined local news with imperial propaganda.” Putin then followed that up by
prohibiting regional parties.
According to Manannikov, “the current reincarnation
of the empire, whose leaders have studied the two period of disintegration of the
last century, have eliminated form the media space and administrative practice
all that is living which arose during Perestroika and tightened the imperial
screws tighter than in Soviet times.”
As a result, even though an awareness of
Siberia’s uniqueness remains, “it is more dead than alive,” he says. “Even the
so-called ‘opposition’ in Siberia thinks and acts in line with the imperial
agenda.” Tragically, “the average Novosibirsk oppositionist associates himself
more with the empire than those who are struggling fr independence and sovereignty.”
The situation in fact is now the reverse of
what it was in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Then, Estonians, Latvians and
Lithuanians didn’t wait for guidance from Moscow and assume that Moscow’s
issues should be theirs. Instead, they acted on their own, and people in Moscow
looked to them instead.
“Colonies seeking liberation do not ask
advice from the metropolitan center,” Manannnikov says. “Even from Professor
Solovey.” And they do not allow themselves to be frightened by propaganda suggesting
that they must stay part of the empire or be occupied by China or must be proud
of what their ancestors did to save the empire in the past.
The situation in the non-Russian republics
like Buryatia and Tuva is somewhat better: they have a national media and thus
a national agenda is discussed at least in part. But there too the situation is far from good:
the shaman from Sakha felt he had to go to Moscow to oust Putin “rather than
call on the help of the spirits to help get [his republic] out of the evil
empire.”
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