Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 25 – Just as some
people can be influenced by a single tweet while others cannot be by a much
larger political campaign, so too some can be intimidated by the threat of facing
criminal sanctions while others, convinced that they are right and have no choice
but to act despite that possibility won’t be.
One people lose their fear of that
kind of punishment, the balance of power between the people and the authorities
changes with the latter forced to come up with ever more draconian punishments
or alternatively forced to make concessions of kinds they never thought they
would have to.
That is the lesson of the fight for
union rights in many countries, for civil rights in the American South, and for
freedom in authoritarian countries. It
is why Pope John Paul’s words in Poland, “Be not afraid,” played such an
enormous role in mobilizing the people there and across the Soviet bloc against
communism and Soviet oppression.
Now, once again, this is happening
in Shiyes – and that is likely to be a far more important consequence of the
anti-trash demonstrations there than the way in which Russians in other parts
of that country are taking up the cause of opposing becoming places for the
dumping of Moscow’s garbage.
Andrey Borovikov, one of the
original organizers of the Shiyes protests, has been sentenced to community service
for his actions and now faces the possibility that he will be sent to prison
because he has continued to violate the government’s regulation. But that threat is no longer paralyzing him
as it might have earlier (severreal.org/a/30274360.html).
Borovikov and his
supporters say that “whatever new sentence is handed down on the activist,
neither force, nor fines, nor administrative and criminal cases by the
authorities will be able to stop the residents of the North from struggling
against the construction of the trash dump,” the Sever-Real portal reports.
“If I said that I am not afraid [of
jail time],” he told Radio Liberty earlier, “I would be lying. Naturally, I am
afraid. But at the same time, I recognize that if not me, who? The problem of
our people, the Russian people and not just Russians but all residents as a whole
because we are a multi-national country is that we all wait for someone to come
and decide things.”
“That’s why I decided and I will not
wait for anyone anymore, that I will decide. And so too have many of our
activists. Consequently, if I am condemned to jail for that idea, I am ready,”
Borovikov says. Sever-Real
confirms that many other participants in the Shiyes protests have reached the
same conclusion.
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