Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 19 – Those governors
who are doing what the Kremlin has advised and following Moscow city’s approach
to fighting the coronavirus now face a new challenge: the residents of certain
regions have now brought suit against them for doing precisely that (7x7-journal.ru/articles/2020/04/06/yuristy-v-regionah-rossii-podali-v-sud-na-gubernatorov).
So far, lawyers and activists in
Moscow itself, the Komi Republic, and Sverdlovsk, Tyumen, Vologda and Orenburg
oblasts are suing their governors for seeking to impose Moscow-style isolation
which they argue is giving the authorities the power to destroy all their civil
rights.
Now, a group of deputies from the Lipetsk
Oblast legislature is planning to do the same, arguing that the governor’s
order for obligatory self-isolation and electronic passes is illegal and must
be overturned. One deputy, Oleg Khomutinnikov, an organizer of the Federative
Party of Russia, explains why to the Region.Expert portal (region.expert/lipetsk-freedom/).
“We do not consider the introduction
of digital passes an effective measure in the struggle with the coronavirus.
The governor has not presented any specific arguments in support of his
position,” the deputy says. Besides,
such passes “limit the constitutional rights of citizens and the freedom of
movement.”
Indeed, Khomutinnikov says, one has
the impression that the introduction of these passes under the cover of the pandemic
is “an experiment” that if it succeeds may be extended for other more nefarious
purposes. “Certain people are even comparing them with experiments in Nazi
Germany.”
According to the deputy, “the
reaction of citizens in Lipetsk Oblast has been extremely negative; and
therefore, we as deputies have been obligated at the legislative level to
reject all the initiatives of the governor and turn to the courts. Perhaps,
digital passes are a good idea for controlling criminals under house arrest but
they aren’t for free citizens.”
Deputies in the regional parliament
do not feel constrained about taking such a step, Khomutinnikov says,
especially now when even the head of the oblast court has expressed doubts
about the legality of such passes (vesti-lipetsk.ru/novosti/obshestvo/predsedatel-lipeckogo-oblastnogo-suda-somnevaetsya-v-zakonnosti-propusknogo-rezhima/).
What this suggests, of course, is
just as some of the governors are slipping out from under Moscow’s control
because of this crisis, so too some of the regional governments are slipping
out from under the control of the governors, a development that makes central
control of the regions far more problematic.
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