Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 21 -- Over the last several years and especially in
the last several months, something unusual has occurred in the Russian
Federation: the most important protests have taken place far beyond Moscow’s
ring road – in Arkhangelsk, Khabarovsk and now in Bashkortostan – and have laid
“a depth charge” under the Russian state, Ruslan Gorevoy says.
The Versiya commentator notes
that many in the capital have ignored these protests and failed to respond to
them either with force or negotiations early on, thus allowing them to grow
from specific complaints to general political demands, much like those in
Belarus now (versia.ru/iz-bolshix-gorodov-protesty-peremeshhayutsya-v-glubinku--a-nu-kak-rvanyot).
Indeed,
one can say, as former MGIMO professor Valery Solovey puts it, that Russia
today already has acquired “an internal Belarus,” one that the powers that be
both regionally and at the center don’t know how to deal with. They fear any
crude repression will lead not to the end of protests but to more of them, and
so they are biding their time.
But
in adopting this wait-and-see approach, Gorevoy suggests, they are opening the
door to two new threats: the near certainty as has already happened in
Khabarovsk that the demands of the protesters will become more radical and
political, and the equal certainty that these protests will spread to other
regions and thus pose an even larger challenge to Moscow.
Among
the places where the Versiya commentator says protests are likely to emerge in
the near future are Irkutsk Oblast, where people are already angry at Moscow,
Arkhangelsk where the governor is extremely unpopular, Sakha where people are
ready to come into the streets, and Omsk where workers have already struck
local mines.
Moscow
may hope that it can leave these things to the regional leaders; but just as
with Belarus, the Russian government is inevitably drawn in either as a target
of the increasingly politicized protests or as the only force capable of dealing
with them – or at the very least, giving direction to the responses of its
regional representatives.
So
far, Gorevoy suggests, Moscow has not sent a clear message; and as a result,
what had appeared to be a minor problem is growing into a far larger and more
threatening one.
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