Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 20 – The difficulties
non-Russian republics are having with the pandemic, difficulties they have in
common with predominantly Russian oblasts and krays, are being used by officials
and commentators in Moscow to promote the idea that the republics should be
eliminated, combined with Russian regions, or put under direct federal rule,
Elberd Sagov says.
In a commentary for Portal Six, the
Ingush writer says that in recent days, two themes have dominated the Russian
information “space” – regional mergers and the collapse of the medical system
in Daghestan. In many cases, supporters of amalgamation point to Daghestan in
support of their position (6portal.ru/posts/коронавирусный-коллапс-региональных/#more-1197).
“Chauvinist telegram channels now
are attempting to present what is taking place in Daghestan as evidence of the complete
inability of the Daghestanis to do things on their own” and to argue that “if
the federal center has to interfere to correct the consequences of their failed
policy, then it would be better to administer this territory directly from the
center.”
“But the truth is that the current
epidemiological collapse in Daghestan is the consequence of the failure not of the
republic authorities who in fact have not existed for a long time but rather of
the direct administration of the Kremlin which was put in place at a minimum
with the appointment of Vladimir Vasiliyev” three years ago, Sagov says. Under
him, all key decisions have been made by outsiders.
According to the Portal Six commentator,
“it is obvious that he chauvinists have already lost all connection with
reality” and are pushing for policies that will make a bad situation even worse. Already they have done serious damage and all
that is left in republics like Daghestan and Ingushetia are “the names and
decorations.”
Sending more Russianized non-Russians
or even Russian Russians to those republics and others will only further
inflame the national feelings of the local population. Such an approach will,
as the current situation shows, do nothing to help improve the situation.
If the Russian nation was not
suffering demographic collapse and depopulation, Moscow might very well adopt
the strategy Beijing has in the Xinjiang-Uyghur Autonomous District in China, dispatching
thousands of Russians to overwhelm the local population. But as much as it
might like to, the Russian center can’t because there aren’t enough Russians.
But it is already clear that the system
of Kremlin appointees running the republics “has exhausted its possibilities”
and that the problems it and not the republics have created have become “a
burden on the Kremlin itself,” Sagov says, something those in the Russian
capital don’t recognize because they view the North Caucasians as incompetent “’natives.’”
“Already for two decades, the
authoritarian regime has kept not only Caucasians but all Russians, regardless
of whether they are ‘national’ or ‘Russian,’ from taking the kind of civic
actions” needed to improve the situation. Those in office depend not on popular
support but only on the backing of the Kremlin.
That arrangement is why things are
so bad as a glance across the border to Georgia shows. There the authorities
are responsible to the people and things are much better as a result, Sagov
continues. And that contains an important lesson: the only way for Russia to
get out of its current dead end is to return to the regions “their
constitutional rights and freedoms, political competition, and direct
elections.”
“Only on the basis” of such things,
the commentator says, will those in office take the kind of efforts that will
serve the people they are supposed to serve rather than officials far away in
the Kremlin whom they now bow down to.
Some Russian scholars are now
focusing on the question of why some regional heads are effective while others
are not. Two, Aleksey Sorbale and Andrey Starodubtsev, have studied that issue
in the Central Federal District (outside of Moscow and Moscow Oblast) (ridl.io/ru/dostojnoe-i-nedostojnoe-pravlenie-v-rossijskih-regionah-vo-vsem-li-vinovaty-gubernatory/).
While
they did not examine any non-Russian republics, something they say made their
analysis easier, their conclusions regarding what makes a governor successful
or not are nonetheless instructive for non-Russian areas as well and explain why
some are doing better while others are doing far worse.
They
identify four factors which contribute to administrative success – the governor
being from the local area, serving for a long time, and having effective
lobbying skills – and three that undermine that possibility – the governor is
an outsider, lack of diversity in the economy and dependence on Moscow, and a
governor’s lack of economic training.
The
two thus conclude that governors matter but they are far from the only factor
of regional success. In large measure, those who succeed come to regions which
have a stronger starting point because of economic resources and a local elite
than those who run regions with weaker economies and few strong local leaders.
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