Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – Since Vladimir
Putin called for the creation of a new Agency for Nationalities Affairs, many
have speculated that this decision will mark a turning point in Moscow’s
approach to the increasingly numerous non-Russian portion of his country’s
population.
But a true measure of its meaning –
which like so much Putin does is more propagandistic than practical – is that
officials involved in setting it up say its staff will not be larger than 100
and that 44 of those will come from the culture and justice ministries rather
than being new hires (nazaccent.ru/content/15704-rabotat-v-agentstve-po-delam-nacionalnostej.html).
In one sense, this is only what
should have been expected. For a nationalities agency to be effective in
Russia, it would have to be given so much power that it would be a threat to
other ministries and even the Kremlin – and consequently, as in the recent
past, the regime has chosen to create something that is unlikely to matter as
much as some hoped and others feared.
In another sense, however, Putin’s
failure to do more in this area is likely to cause him more problems than he
now imagines. Such a tiny bureaucracy will not even be able to monitor what is
going on among the non-Russians let alone take any real actions to solve
nationality problems or prevent clashes.
And that means that the Kremlin will
once again be at the mercy of events, having to react to things it has not been
warned about in a timely fashion, something that a slightly larger agency might
have been able to accomplish.
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