Paul Goble
Staunton,
May 28 – The Komi, a Finno-Ugric nationality in the northeastern portion of
European Russia seldom gets much attention from Moscow and the West; but it is
playing an ever more important role as a leader of regional protests against
Kremlin policies directed against the environment and the rights of minorities.
Komi
activists in cooperation with the KPRF were central to the success of the
Shiyes protests against Moscow’s plans to dump trash from the Russian capital
into their hitherto pristine republic, and now they with the support of the
communists are doing the same with regard to the destruction of local
self-administration bodies, albeit not yet with the same success.
Now that
the Komi State Council, dominated by ethnic Russians and United Russia, has now
voted to force the republic to fall in line with Putin’s program and liquidate
local administrative arrangements (www.semnasem.org/news/2026/05/28/gossovet-komi-likvidiroval-dvuhurovnevuyu-sistemu-mestnogo-samoupravleniya-nesmotrya-na-protesty-rajonov),
many are likely to ignore the Komi once again.
But that
is a mistake because Komi activists have articulated why the Putin program of
local government “optimization” is such a threat to smaller and dispersed
nations and has succeeded in involving the KPRF organization in seeking to
block or at least modify what Moscow wants.
The Komi
Daily, a portal produced by activists now in emigration, points out that “if
the reform is fully implemented, many decisions will no longer be made at the
level of villages and other rural communities [where Komis are a majority] but
in district centers [where they aren’t]” (komidaily.com/2026/05/28/pochemu_likvidatsiya_samoupravleniya_osobenno_opasna_dlya_komi/).
The
portal continues: “the KPRF has
submitted documents for a regional referendum against the liquidation of rural
settlements and the transition to a one-level system of government. If the
reform is fully implemented, many decisions will no longer be made at the level
of villages and villages, but in district centers and municipal districts.”
Moreover,
the Komi Daily points out, supporters of the reform talk about ‘efficiency’ and
lack of personnel, while opponents talk about the further centralization of
power, the disappearance of real local self-government and even greater
alienation of power from the residents of the villages” and further worsen the
demographic situation there.
“In such conditions, centralized management
does not work well. The city authorities are physically unable to manage all
remote territories equally effectively, so a significant part of the powers is
transferred to the local level. Municipalities receive their own budgets and
the right to independently solve many day-to-day issues.”
“This benefits both the center and the
regions. The state does not need to manage each village, and local authorities
respond faster to problems and better understand the specifics of their
territory. For example, northern municipalities know better how to organize
transport, medicine or heating over long winters and long distances.”
As such, the Komi Daily concludes, powerful
local governments would be natural for Russia, especially for the North,
Siberia and the Far East. The country is too large and too diverse for all issues
to be effectively managed from Moscow. But the current regime doesn’t seek an
effective distribution of powers or care about the deteriorating demographic
situation.”
Such arguments are likely to find support in
other parts of the Russian Federation, and the success the Komi have had on
other occasions in resisting Moscow’s power grab is certain to lead people elsewhere
to follow the Komi lead.