Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 16 – The collapse of
the ruble and the consequent decline in the standard of living of many Russians
puts wealthier Russians “at risk” in the event of rising crime, Vladimir Piskaykin,
vice chairman of the Tyumen Oblast Duma says. And he asked police whether they
intend to defend the well off.
Leonid Kolomiyets, head of the local
interior ministry office said that if someone is concerned about his own
security, he can always turn to law enforcement personnel who will determine
whether his fears are justified or not.
Those who can afford to should turn to private security companies.
In reporting this exchange which
highlights some real fears in Russia, Dmitry Rodionov of Svobodnaya pressa points
out that Piskaykin has made money from private security companies and may have reasons
to stoke such fears and get the police to urge the better off part of the population
to turn to such companies (svpressa.ru/society/article/259851/).
Most of the experts and observers
with whom Rodionov spoke were dismissive of Piskaykin’s remarks, seeing them as
yet another example of a politician trying to attract attention, make money for
his business or simply not stopping to think how his words will be understood.
But the remarks of one figure,
Andrey Milyuk, a member of the executive committee of the St. Petersburg section
of the unregistered The Other Russia Party are worthy of attention. On
the one hand, he says that Piskaykin “simply is not a very smart man.” But on
the other, he says that “every rich Russian should experience fear before the
archetype of the popular pogromshchik – the rural peasant with an axe.”
At the present time, Milyuk
suggests, “there are no preconditions for popular uprisings” and that will
remain true even if life becomes significantly worse and jobs far scarcer. Even
in those cases, he says, people “will not go out into the streets.” Instead, “the
masses will r5ise when they are offended and are infuriated by injustice.”
The reasons people take part in
protests of any kind “lie beyond the limits of the rational, in the area of
feelings and emotions. But in this is also a danger for the Piskaikins – the explosion
always happens suddenly when it would seem nothing points to that. This is
almost impossible to predict.”
But there is one thing one can say
for certain, Milyuk says. “the police in such a situation won’t help them.
Speak with a policeman on the beat – that is where real hatred to the powers is
to be found.” Indeed, “it is completely probable that some of them will change
in civies and will be in the first ranks of the pogromshchiki.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised” if that
happened, the St. Petersburg activist says.
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