|
|

#15
Moscow Times
July 19, 2002
Getting Radical About Extremism
By Robert Coalson
On June 21, President Vladimir Putin made an important symbolic gesture by
awarding the Order of Courage to Tatyana Sapunova, the 28-year-old woman who was
severely wounded on May 27 when a booby trap exploded while she attempted to
tear down an anti-Semitic sign outside Moscow. Sapunova was as startled as
anyone by Putin's move: "The news was entirely surprising," she was
quoted by Itar-Tass as saying.
One reason why Sapunova and others were so surprised is that Putin's public
track record on the problems of nationalism and extremism -- like that of former
President Boris Yeltsin -- is unimpressive. To take just one example, on April
27, 2000, Putin awarded a medal for "distinguished service to the
fatherland" to then Krasnodar region Governor Nikolai Kondratenko, a man
noted for his frequent obnoxiously racist and anti-Semitic utterances. The award
came less than one year after the Moscow Helsinki Group listed Krasnodar as
"the most infamous region [of Russia] when it comes to state-supported
extremism." The region "has become the saddest example of the
installation of a regime of extreme xenophobia and ethnic discrimination in a
major Russian region. Without a doubt, the major factor is the head of the
administration, Nikolai Kondratenko," the report reads. But instead of
being reviled, Kondratenko was quietly removed to the Federation Council. Most
recently, he was heard from in February when he sent an envoy to the founding
conference of the openly anti-Semitic People's Patriotic Party, at which one
party leader said that Jews "must return what they have looted in Russia
and publicly repent to the Russian people for the crimes that Jewish terrorists
and extremists have committed."
Now, seemingly, Putin has changed his mind, and since mid-May, when Putin
himself suddenly determined that it is an urgent national problem, extremism has
become one of the most discussed topics in Russia. Since then, a controversial
new bill on extremist crimes has been drafted and then pushed through the State
Duma and the Federation Council with lightning speed, while the country has been
rocked by a number of high-visibility hate crimes from Kaliningrad to the Far
East.
The new law has come under sharp and justified criticism from liberals and
activists. Primarily, critics contend that the bill is too vague, making it
potentially a weapon against almost any kind of political activity. Given that
local prosecutors are notoriously under the thumb of local officials, and that
many of those officials have an odious record of abusing their
"administrative resources" to further their own political ends,
activists are wary of handing them yet another weapon to use against the
country's fragile civil society.
Moreover, critics note that Russia already has enough laws to prosecute
extremist groups, but that law enforcement officials have been inexplicably
reluctant to use them. Putin and Prosecutor General Vladimir Ustinov have
repeatedly publicly acknowledged this fact. On July 11, Deputy Interior Minister
Vladimir Vasiliyev likewise admitted that regional officials take extremist and
racist crimes far too lightly, "tending to describe them as mere childish
naughtiness or hooliganism." As if on cue, a local police official in
Irkutsk on the same day told journalists that there was no evidence that an
incident in which a gunman fired into a mosque during a prayer service was an
extremist crime and, therefore, his department is treating it as
"hooliganism." On July 7, 12 people were hospitalized after a brawl
between Armenians and Russians in the Moscow region town of Krasnoarmeisk. When
the Armenians called the police for help, they were told that "there was
not enough staff to respond," according to Emmanuil Dolbakyan, chairman of
the Ararat Armenian cultural center in Moscow.
It remains to be seen whether symbolic gestures, such as Putin's recent
public statements or bestowing the award upon Sapunova, will be able to change
these long-entrenched attitudes.
Although no one is certain exactly how many Russians are actively involved in
extremist groups, it is evident that solving the problem is much more a matter
of education and leadership than of law enforcement. Speaking one day after the
rampage in Moscow following Russia's World Cup loss to Japan, during which
rioters targeted Asian tourists and businesses, a senior official in the
Education Ministry made exactly this point. "The roots of yesterday's
events lie in the complex, overall social situation in the country. Spiritually,
we have lost an entire generation, and now it is practically impossible to reach
their hearts and minds," Valentina Berezina, head of the ministry's
Supplementary Education Department, was quoted as saying. "On the state
level, we must create and implement complex programs to bring together the
strengths of all social institutes, including, first of all, the family."
Notably, the recent parliamentary debate on the new anti-extremism law has
not included an examination of the federal program on "forming the
conditions of tolerance and preventing extremism in Russian society," which
was adopted in August 2001. That four-year plan, although far from perfect, is
under the auspices of the Education Ministry, but foresees the involvement of
nearly a dozen other agencies. According to the plan, by the end of this year,
the program should already have developed experimental educational programs to
promote tolerance, programs that should be part of the national educational
curriculum by 2004. During the admittedly cursory and facile discussion of the
new law on combating extremism, no one in the Duma or the Federation Council
considered it useful to check up on the progress of this initiative or to
suggest that bolstering it might be more productive than the law being rammed
through the legislature.
Another crucial factor that has allowed extremist groups to fester in the
regions is the weakness of the local media, a condition that has been cultivated
by local and national authorities for their political ends. Local media,
ideally, should cast light on such phenomena at the earliest stages, when mere
public outrage can be enough to have a decisive effect. In Russia, however,
state-controlled local media have shown little interest in covering such groups,
and independent media has generally been too weak and vulnerable to be
effective.
Throughout the 1990s, Russia's leading extremist group, Russian National
Unity, or RNE, waged an unrelenting national campaign of intimidation and
lawsuits against local journalists who dared to report on its activities or tag
it with the label "fascist." In 2000, the Glasnost Defense Foundation
published a book detailing typical cases from the second half of the 1990s in
Voronezh, Stavropol and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk that ranks among some of the most
compelling reading to come out of post-Soviet Russia. One is equally impressed
by the courage of journalists such as Voronezh's Natalya Novozhilova and aghast
at the helplessness of the law to protect them from the intimidations of
fascists who, as often as not, seem to be at least tacitly in league with local
officials. This book makes a persuasive case for the argument that a real
independent press would do far more to combat extremism in Russia than any
number of laws or police officers.
Robert Coalson, former opinion page editor of The Moscow Times, is an editor
and analyst for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's Newsline, where a shorter
version of this comment appeared.
BACK TO THE TOP #215 CONTENTS NEXT SECTION
|
|