Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 20 – Two out of five
(39 percent) of Moscow residents express concern that the video cameras
installed during the pandemic violate basic freedoms and the constitution and
open the way to authoritarianism and dictatorship, according to a new Levada
Center poll (levada.ru/2020/08/20/videonablyudenie-v-publichnyh-mestah/).
An even larger share – 53 percent –
say that the video cameras in the Russian capital allow for total monitoring
and control and are open to “unscrupulous” use by those with access to the
cameras and tapes, the poll found. But
at the same time, a slight plurality, 47 percent to 42 percent said the cameras
played a more positive than negative role, as an aid to fighting crime.
In presenting the results, Levada
sociologist Denis Volkov says that younger people were more opposed to the
video monitoring while older people were more acceptant and even supportive. He
added that those who oppose the Putin administration also oppose the video
monitors while those who support the Kremlin support them.
These results highlight suggest two conclusions:
On the one hand, in the city of Moscow at least, using this poll as a measure,
the number of Putin supporters and that of Putin opponents are remarkably close.
And on the other, those who oppose video cameras and oppose Putin see these steps
taken during the pandemic as a continuing threat to their constitutional
rights.
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