Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 17 – Some Russian
commentators have suggested that what is happening in Belarus now may be a
dress rehearsal for what may happen in Russia in 2024. Whether that is the case
remains to be seen, but Ivan Preobrazhensky says the Belarusian events are
already having an impact on Russian officialdom.
He argues that the main reason Ufa backed
down in the face of massive protests against the destruction of a sacred
mountain there was that the powers that be don’t want anyone to draw a direct
line between Lukashenka’s repression and their own behavior (dw.com/ru/kommentarij-protesty-v-bashkirii-jekoaktivisty-napugali-vlast/a-54593360).
Consequently, after initially using
force to try to disperse the protesters at Kushtau, the Ufa government possibly
on orders from the Kremlin backed down and said that the industrial development
on that site would be stopped until an agreement on what to do mutually
acceptable to Ufa, the corporation involved and the protesters had been
reached.
Preobrazhensky points out that there
are three reasons for thinking that this is a tactical rather than strategic shift
in the position of the Russian authorities. First, what Ufa has done is not so
much to resolve the situation in favor of the protesters but put off a decision
in order to use propaganda to change attitudes or hope time will do that for
them.
Second, the Kushtau protests are
about an environmental issue, the only subject where the authorities have been
willing to pull back even a little, as they have done in Shiyes as well. Other
ecological protests at least for the present may have similar success because
the authorities know how sensitive environmental concerns are.
And third, what has happened this week
in Kushtau or more precisely what has not happened might have been very
different if the Belarusian events were not taking place at the same time. Had
the Kushtau protests occurred earlier or later, Ufa and Moscow might have felt far
freer to crush them and give their corporate allies a victory.
In this way, and possibly also in
Khabrovsk, Preobrzhensky suggests, the Belarusian events are staying the hand
of the siloviki in Russia for the time being given that Moscow very much wants
to present itself as an alternative to Lukashenka rather than allow people to
see that Putin is very much his blood brother.
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