Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 16 – The division
of residents in the Russian north between native indigenous peoples and arrivals
from the outside, including most prominently ethnic Russians that the West
wants and that Russia had agreed to has no basis in fact and is harming the
country’s national security, Vladimir Stanulevich says.
The ethnic Russian Arkhangelsk
commentator argues that the archaeological and historical record shows that
ethnic Russians have been in the North longer than many of the supposedly “indigenous”
peoples, have a similar way of life, and thus deserve to receive the same
benefits as the latter (regnum.ru/news/society/2809210.html).
But instead of recognizing that
reality, Stanulevich says, current Russian law adopted under pressure from the
West in the 1990s gives the supposed “indigenous” people benefits and that is
leading to Russian flight. In 1989, for example, 50 percent of the population of
Sakha was ethnic Russian. Now, only 37 percent is.
But the division of peoples there
into indigenous and arrivals has “other potential problems,” he continues,
because the UN specifies that indigenous people have the right of self-determination
up to and including the formation of independent countries, something the US
will undoubtedly exploit to gain control of the Northern Sea Route.
When the current federal law on indigenous
peoples was being formulated in the 1990s, Russian officials were trading off
Russia’s interests “retail and wholesale,” all too often listening to “American
experts … who later turned out to be paid officers of the Central Intelligence
Agency.”
Reading those laws now and considering
what they have led to, Stanulevich says, one is prompted to ask Milyukov’s
famous question: “was this stupidity or was this treason?”
Now, it is time, he argues, to
replace the faulty laws of the 1990s with their “imported ideas” and put in place
legislation that reflects both Russian realities and Russian interests and
block the efforts of the Americans to undermine the country from the North as
they have done elsewhere.
Other steps need to be taken as
well, Stanulevich says: Moscow must boost funding for the Institute of Archaeology
so that it will be in a position to prove that Russians arrived in the North
well before anyone else; and it must promote a new ideology of the North, one
based on “the state-forming role” of the ethnic Russians. There is no time to
lose.
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