Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 18 – After
Vladimir Putin became president, he insisted that the constitutions of the non-Russian
republics be brought into line with the Russian one. Tatarstan was among those
which resisted and which succeeded in maintaining many of the provisions which the
Kremlin leader did not like, including references to the federative treaty of
the 1990s.
Now, Moscow is amending its
constitution and the question naturally arises what impact that will have on
the basic laws of the republics. Rafael
Khakimov says whatever Russia does with its constitution, “Russia will not
change,” and that Tatarstan will continue to develop and move forward (azatliq.org/a/30254053.html in Tatar; idelreal.org/a/30259693.html
in Russian).
The prominent Tatar historian and
former political advisor to Mintimir Shaymiyev tells Radio Liberty’s Tatar-Bashkir
Service that “after declaring the sovereignty of Tatarstan, we had to strengthen
this by legislation. Moscow did not especially like this.” But at that time,
Moscow had only an old constitution and not the one from 1993.
“Laws in Russia have their own
characteristics, but life proceeds in its own too. Therefore, one should not be
surprised” that Moscow wants one thing but that others, including Tatarstan,
are able to insist on their own, as Kazan has with its continuing reference to
the federative treaty Moscow has annulled. But Khakimov says those references
must be retained.
When the Kremlin tried to make all
the republics conform to its arrangements, he continues, “the main question was
how we saw relations with the center. Moscow wrote its constitution; it wanted
to have everything conform to a single arrangement. It, of course, didn’t like that
we were doing our own thing.”
At that time, Kazan resisted, but
not by the protest demonstrations some expected but rather in talks. These were “not easy.” But it must be
remembered that all the other republics had backed down, and Tatarstan “remained
alone.” Its ability to resist was thus limited, the Kazan historian and
political advisor says.
Khakimov says that it remains to be seen
how Moscow will act after it changes its constitution. But regardless of what
is written there, “Russia will not change.”
And as a result, “Tatarstan all the same will continue to develop and
move forward.” It may even be able to
achieve more than many expect.
Shaymiyev’s proposal for tri-lingual
schools is a way to defend Tatarstan against Russianization, Khakimov
says. And there are ways for Tatarstan
to do more in combination with the two to three million Tatars living outside
the republic and with those Tatars at risk of deportation to China. They should
be given residence permits and allowed to remain.
It is easy but wrong to focus
exclusively on the shortcomings of Tatarstan’s basic law and policies. But “let’s
look at the positive side. Tatarstan still exists. The republic lives. Its
Constitution operates. We today are involved in political circumstances. There are
limits and we can’t jump higher. Tatarstan exists in Russia’s political field and
is forced to play its games.”
There is a reason people say that “politics
is the art of the possible.”
At present, “we can be proud that
there is a Republic of Tatarstan and that it has its own Constitution,”
Khakimov concludes. Yes, it has been reduced and even shredded, but the Constitution
still exists and in some areas, we still
can operate on its basis.” That is no small thing now or for the future.
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