Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – When Russians
go into the streets to protest as they have most recently in Vladikavkaz, the
Russian government moves quickly with the police arresting large numbers of
participants and the Kremlin denouncing such violations of public order. And
with the self-isolation orders, relatively few people are choosing to engage in
such demonstrations.
But because popular anger is
mounting, Russians have found another way to express their fury: they are organizing
virtual actions online against the current regime of self-isolation by posting critical
commentaries on the sites of regional adminstrations (club-rf.ru/detail/4035; cf. novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/04/20/85010-hotim-est-raboty-net
and globalvoices.org/2020/04/20/russians-launch-mass-protests-using-satnav-application/).
Such virtual protests have already
occurred in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Krasnodar, Samara, Krasnoyarsk,
Ufa, and Yekaterinburg and may soon spread to other cities as well. Experts say
that these allow people to blow off steam and thus may calm the situation; but
others suggest that they could become tools in the political struggle.
That will happen, they suggest, if “the
opposition can seize the wave of such online meetings” and, building upon them,
ultimately take people into the streets, not only in protest against
self-isolation but about other problems as well. Thus, what is happening now is
a testing out of a new means of political action.
Political analyst Alyona Avgust
tells the Club RF group that online protests are part of the new reality that
pandemic has given rise to but that they are quite likely to continue after the
coronavirus crisis passes and be used to protest other things. The authorities
will prefer it if it drains off interest in street protests but not if it feeds
into them.
A major test will be whether the
opposition is able to capitalize on this form of spontaneous protest or instead
views if as something beyond its scope. That could be a disaster for the current
opposition: “new times give rise to new heroes, and it’s possible we will see
the actions of new small parties which were registered not long ago.”
Andrey Bogdanov, another political
analyst, says that this form of protest will work only on Internet resources
that the regime doesn’t control. Those it controls can quickly take down
anything citizens put up. Indeed, it has
long experience in doing that. But on others, citizen protests of this type may
spread and even give rise to real street demonstrations.
That is what the authorities clearly
fear, Bogdanov continues.
Yekaterina Kolesnikov, head of the
North-West Expert Analytic Center, agrees, both about the controls and about
the possibility that the online protests will grow into street demonstrations.
People will become more accustomed to expressing their anger, and the shift
from one kind of protest to the other will be easier.
That is what makes these virtual
protests so important. They are a school for broader political action.
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