Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 – The Moscow
Institute on Social-Labor Rights has released a report on protest activity
during the second quarter of 2020 when the pandemic in Russia was at its
height. The report say that the pandemic both depressed the number of protests
and changed their format (trudprava.ru/images/2020_2_Quart_Monitoring.pdf).
Because of the restrictions on
public activity, the amount of protest activity in Russia declined from the
fourth quarter of 2019 when there were 624 actions of various kinds and the
first quarter of 2020 when there were 534 cases to just 424 cases in the second
quarter of this year.
At the same time, much of the protest
activity shifted from the streets to online forms, with open letters, video
appeals, online meetings, and online pickets the dominant form of protest.
There were also a few hunger strikes in Sochi, Krasnoyarsk, Kirov and Chita,
the report said.
The pandemic and the restrictions
imposed to combat it gave Russians new reasons to protest, but the restrictions
had the effect of restricting protest largely to online forms. One consequence
of this was the professional associations became more important as the basis
for protests because they already had an online presence.
As far as the future is concerned,
the report offers three conclusions. First, many protests will remain online.
Second, they will increasingly focus on workplace issues like non-payment of
wages or loss of work given that unemployment rose to its highest point this
year in the third quarter.
And third, according to the report,
political parties need to take both the changed nature of protests and the
changed focus of public concern into their plans for the upcoming elections so
as to capture the support of those who have been hurt the most economically by
the coronavirus pandemic.
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