Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – A protest in
Vladikavkaz against counter-coronavirus measures that was led by a
pandemic-denier and that attracted several hundred people before being
dispersed with arrests by the police is likely to be “the model for other
regions of Russia,” according to political commentator Maksim Zharov.
The most striking thing about it is
that the head of the region, Vyacheslav Bitarov, appeared before the protesters
and attempted to calm them by saying he wasn’t responsible for the restrictions.
But his words were met with calls for his resignation (politobzor.net/214400-mitingi-protiv-samoizolyacii-v-severnoy-osetii-model-dlya-drugih-regionov.html).
Zharov says that this is not a local
event but rather “’the first swallow’ of protest action by the population
regarding the coronavirus epidemic.” Most Russians don’t understand why they
are being required to stay at home and forgo work and income when others are
allowed to go about their business.
It is thus “no accident” protesters
in Vladikavkaz demanded the republic head explain why a company his family owns
continues to operate when the places where they are employed have not been. According
to Zharov, this politicization of the new protests is likely in “politically
active regions where there are serious problems between the powers and the people.”
Because this protest was the first
in what promises to be a long line of such demonstrations, reactions by the commentariat
and officials were perhaps overstated. One Muscovite writer described the event
as “almost a revolt” (echo.msk.ru/blog/brainman85/2628880-echo/) and the Kremlin
denounced it as illegal (vestikavkaza.ru/news/kreml-aktsiya-protesta-protiv-rezhima-samoizolyatsii-vo-vladikavkaze-byla-nezakonnoy.html).
What needs to be remembered is that
North Ossetia has often been more politically active than other federal
subjects. It was among the first to declare itself sovereign in the so-called “parade
of sovereignties” in 1990 and so its precedential value may be more limited
than some think (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/08/could-parade-of-sovereignties-have.html).
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