Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 24 – Ayrat
Dilmukhametov, a Bashkir activist now in prison awaiting trial for his promotion
of a new federal system in which Russian regions would gain the rights of
republics and the non-Russian republics would promote civic identities, says
the national movements in the country must be part of the Russian opposition.
That is no easy task, he says, because
the three hundred years of Russian imperial rule has affected the attitudes of
many in the opposition; but non-Russians have no choice because they cannot
fail to extent to Russians the right of self-determination that they insist
upon for themselves (region.expert/airat-interview/).
Interviewed by Vadim Shtepa of the Region.Expert
portal, Dilmukhametov says that the case against him is so absurd and
obscurantist that it is his impression that even many of his jailors and the
prosecutors have sympathy for him although they can’t express this because of
fears of retribution from those higher up.
He argues that the reasons
repression is being visited upon him and others is that “the ideas which I am
bringing to the fore, especially about a new and treaty-based federalism, are
both true and timely” and that the people, the true source of power in Russia, increasingly
recognize that their rights are being taken away and will seek to take them
back.
In this struggle, Dilmukhametov
continues, “a real national movement must be part of het opposition.” If it isn’t,
that will only weaken both and thus work to the benefit of the powers that
be. To achieve unity, the non-Russians
must acknowledge that the Russians have the same rights that the non-Russians
do.
Moreover, in many cases, the
non-Russians as separate nations are nonetheless “part of Russian civilization.”
The Bashkirs are one of those, he argues.
If there is mutual respect, there won’t be any calls for independence;
and both sides will find that they are stronger together than they would be
apart.
(For background on
Dilmukhametov and his ideas, which have often put him at odds with both
nationalists and the Russian opposition, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/10/bashkir-activist-seeks-support-from.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/08/only-real-federalism-can-save-russia.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/06/imprisoned-for-advocating-federalism-in.html.)
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