|
#6
Los Angeles Times
January 14, 2003
Closing a Bridge to Democracy
With the expulsion of the Peace Corps and other promoters of Westera is ultimately harming itself, analysts say.
By David Holley, Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW -- During her year in the Peace Corps, Laura Geller lived in a typical
Russian apartment, enjoyed running a children's English club, made many friends,
destroyed preconceptions about Americans -- and ultimately got kicked out of the
country.
The decision by authorities last summer not to renew visas for Geller and 29
other volunteers was the beginning of the end for the Peace Corps here, after a
decade of work by hundreds of volunteers to build cross-cultural bridges and
help Russians adjust to a globalized market economy.
"I think I broke a lot of stereotypes," said Geller, 23, who now
lives in Youngstown, Ohio. "People don't understand us. They think we're
'loudmouthed Americans,' we have money falling out of our pockets, we don't care
about anybody.... I'd have people say, 'We thought all Americans are fat, but
you're not fat.' Or, 'Aren't you rich?' " Halfway through her planned tour
at a specialized foreign language school in Penza, 360 miles southeast of
Moscow, Geller got word that she had five days to pack up and leave Russia.
"It was such a shock," she recalled. "At the train station,
when I left, was the hardest and the saddest. Everybody I knew came."
The expulsion of the Peace Corps from Russia, announced last month, fits into
a pattern of growing pressure against foreign groups that promote democratic
values. Volunteers taught business skills and English, both useful in the
nation's transition from communism.
Moscow recently banned the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe from continuing its work in Chechnya, where the group had been monitoring
human rights abuses and working toward peaceful settlement of a conflict between
Russian forces and separatist rebels.
A prominent U.S. labor activist who has lived in Russia since 1989 had her
visa revoked Dec. 30 when she arrived back at a Moscow airport after a brief
holiday. Authorities gave no explanation for the expulsion of Irene Stevenson,
head of the American Center for International Labor Solidarity in Moscow, which
trains union organizers and provides legal aid in labor disputes.
The center, which is backed by the AFL-CIO, provided a lawyer last month for
air traffic controllers involved in a labor dispute, and Stevenson has spoken
publicly about the need for workers to defend their interests.
The summer decision not to extend the visas of so many Peace Corps volunteers
-- even as 34 others had their visas renewed -- also was unexplained at the
time. A variety of justifications were offered later.
Nikolai P. Patrushev, head of the Federal Security Service, successor to the
Soviet-era KGB, implied to Russian media that the Peace Corps harbored spies.
Volunteers had "engaged in collecting information about the sociopolitical
and economic situation in Russian regions," he charged.
Some government officials said volunteers weren't properly trained. Others
said that by hosting the Peace Corps, Russia was lumping itself with
poverty-stricken countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America.
The Peace Corps was founded by President Kennedy in 1961 to assist
impoverished nations primarily in agriculture, health and education and to
improve ties between the United States and host countries.
The Russian Foreign Ministry voiced no criticism in declaring an end to the
program in the nation. Instead, it thanked the Peace Corps and said Russia faces
new challenges.
"Due to the changing economic and social tasks facing our country, we
are holding consultations with the American side on how new forms of partnership
could be worked out more in line with today's needs," said Foreign Ministry
spokesman Alexander Yakovenko.
Liliya F. Shevtsova, an analyst with the Carnegie Moscow Center, said she
believes backers of President Vladimir V. Putin engineered moves against
foreigners with an eye to parliamentary elections late this year and
presidential elections in 2004.
Labor activist Stevenson and the Peace Corps "just had the bad luck of
being around at the most inappropriate moment, when their heads -- or the heads
of someone like them -- were needed," Shevtsova said. "What happened
to them is not an accident. It is a carefully designed tactic of flirting with
the traditionalist, hard-line segment of the Russian electorate."
Though unhappy about Moscow's moves, Washington "will not allow these
relatively minor points to get in the way of a much more important issue --
Iraq," she predicted, noting that the Bush administration wants Russian
support on the U.N. Security Council.
The 27 volunteers still here -- down from a peak of about 200 -- were due to
stay until next summer but will leave before then, said Jeffrey Hay, the Peace
Corps' acting director for Russia. Some of those whose visas were renewed have
already left. He declined to speculate on why the group is being forced to leave
but said that "the allegations that Peace Corps volunteers are involved in
intelligence activities are completely groundless."
The Peace Corps' record since its 1992 start here should be looked back on as
a success, Hay added.
"We've had over 700 volunteers. They've been in nearly 40 regions. They
taught almost 26,000 students," he noted.
Viktor A. Kremenyuk, deputy director of the USA-Canada Institute, a Moscow
think tank, said he believes that kicking out the Peace Corps was meant to
balance the pro-Western stance Putin has adopted since the Sept. 11 attacks on
the U.S.
But the decision "does more harm to Russia than to the Peace
Corps," he added.
"The fact that the Peace Corps will no longer operate in Russia is not
in itself a horrible tragedy," he said. "But it scares off other
people -- businessmen and companies with big money.... It undermines the
country's ratings in the eyes of Western investors."
Alexei V. Kuznetsov of The Times' Moscow Bureau contributed to this report.
|