Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 31 – The inability
of the Kremlin to respond adequately to the pandemic that is forcing the
regions to take actions in unprecedented ways, the anger in regions that people
fleeing from the cities to rural areas are spreading the virus to them, and fears
that Moscow will respond all this with more repression is sparking what some
now call “coronavirus regionalism.”
Moscow’s slowness in reaction to the
pandemic has forced regions into areas they have never ventured before with a
third unilaterally delaying the Russian draft (ura.news/news/1052425255) or restricting
sale of alcohol (https://meduza.io/news/2020/03/31/v-rossiyskih-regionah-nachali-ogranichivat-prodazhu-alkogolya)
-- not to mention Chechnya’s cutting
itself off from the the rest of the country.
What is striking, opposition politician
Sergey Udaltsov says, is the absence of federal reaction to any of these steps.
The regions are on their own, and they feel themselves on their own, he says.
That will only encourage some of them to take additional steps that may go far
beyond fighting the pandemic (echo.msk.ru/programs/personalno/2616505-echo/).
Konstantin Sonin, who teaches at the
Higher School of Economics and the University of Chicago, agrees, arguing that
this shift from central governments to regions is happening elsewhere,
including the United States (msk.ru/blog/ksonin/2615475-echo/).
And opposition politician Leonid Gozman even speaks of this process as leading
to “the death of law and the disintegration of the state” (echo.msk.ru/blog/leonid_gozman/2615433-echo/).
A second cause behind the new regionalism
in the coronavirus pandemic is the awareness many outside the ring road have that
Moscow is “the main distributor” of the virus and that Muscovites must be
blocked from coming to the regions and spreading it (region.expert/ryazan/ and region.expert/moscorona/).
In many cases, people in the region
are enraged that people in the cities feel free to flee into their backyards
when the pandemic hits the cities but otherwise show no concern for the
regions. This is further exacerbating the always strong hostility to Muscovites
and other big city residents (severreal.org/a/30517583.html
and gorod-812.ru/priezzhayut-iz-stolits-i-privozyat-zarazu-provintsialnyie-hroniki/),
And
yet a third cause of what commentator Igor Yakovenko calls “the parade of
coronavirus sovereignties” is that people in the regions are trying to take as
much as they can knowing that Moscow will use the only tool it has confidence
in – greater repression – to try to take these things back once it feels itself
in a position to do so (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5E84A7C207DA0).
Regionalist
writer Vadim Sidorov is among those who have christened this trend as “coronavirus
regionalism” and argued that even when the pandemic passes, the relationship
between Moscow and the regions will have changed in potentially irreversible
and possibly explosive ways (region.expert/saakashvili/).
Like
the others, he draws parallels with the earlier parade of sovereignties that did
not lead to the institutionalization of federalism in the RSFSR but rather to
the disintegration of the USSR 30 years ago.
And Moscow’s likely response to the new parade, as long as Putin is in
power, is thus certain to be repressive. But that response may prove
counterproductive.
No comments:
Post a Comment