The Era of Apathy
After a decade of being treated like children, Russia's electorate is finally finding its voice.
BY TANYA LOKSHINA
The scope of the protests that have
followed Russia's Dec. 4 parliamentary elections, which protesters claim were
rigged, have not only shocked Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his cohort --
it has shocked the opposition as well. And Kremlin officials have no one to
blame but themselves for this swelling protest movement.
The first protests kicked off that
Sunday night, following the ballot, with a demonstration of approximately 5,000
to 10,000 people in the central Moscow area of Chistye Prudy. The protest
turned ugly when riot police attacked protesters marching toward the Central
Electoral Commission building, dispersing demonstrators, sometimes roughly, and
detaining people at random. More than 200 of the detained -- including some
opposition leaders, journalists, and well-known activists -- were held
overnight in crowded cells with no food and no access to lawyers.
Administrative trials started the next day, sentencing protesters to 15 days of
incarceration, officially for resisting police orders but in fact for merely
expressing their discontent with the authorities.
The following days saw more protests
against Putin and the ruling United Russia party in Moscow and other large
Russian cities. They culminated in a massive rally of over 50,000 people in
Moscow's Bolotnaya Square on Dec. 10 (and this is a very conservative
assessment, as the opposition is claiming approximately 100,000). The
protesters were met with a massive police and military presence -- armored
personnel carriers on the ground, roaring helicopters in the sky -- which spoke
of potential trouble, but the day passed without a single provocative act by
the demonstrators nor a single use of force by the police.
The demonstrators wore white ribbons
on their coats, and many carried multicolored balloons and flowers, emphasizing
the nonviolent and nonpartisan spirit of the protest. Smiling young women
pressed white carnations and chrysanthemums on young uniformed servicemen, and
some shyly accepted those gifts of peace, giggling like school kids. Democrats,
communists, anarchists, radical lefties, and people with no political
convictions chanted: "I'm a citizen of my state!" "We want fair
elections!" "Our opinion matters!" That evening, state-owned
television channels featured short reports about the massive demonstration.
They simply had to.
What caused this extraordinary
awakening of Russian citizens, who have previously appeared sullenly
acquiescent to the erosion of democracy during the Putin era? Russia's Interior
Ministry was quick to blame social networks for "threatening the
foundations of the society" and "contributing to the rise in
extremist views." Putin, predictably, is blaming everything on Western
interference, bashing U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for supposedly
sending a "signal" to the opposition to destabilize Russia. In fact,
however, two signature blunders by Putin's own regime served as the trigger for
this current round of protests.
First, it all started with President
Dmitry Medvedev's revelation on Sept. 24 that Putin would run for the Russian
presidency next year, while he would lead United Russia in the parliamentary
vote. Putin himself said, "I want to say directly: An agreement over what
to do in the future was reached between us several years ago."
Western media and policymakers often
explain the lack of pluralism in Russia by pointing to how Russians love
Putin's strong rule, his populist machismo. That may be so, but Russians, as
the elections this month have shown, have also become increasingly unhappy with
more than a decade of so-called "soft" authoritarianism. When Russians
heard that what they long suspected was coming true, many felt they had no
option but to take to the streets. This frustration alone, though, was probably
not enough to convince tens of thousands to gather in Bolotnaya Square for the
first time since the stormy 1990s. It was the brazen acknowledgment by the head
of government that the decision had actually been made long ago and that the
public -- children that they are -- simply hadn't needed to know about it. It
was this gross, infantilizing condescension that became the tipping point. The
realization that the authorities are not even trying to pretend that public
opinion matters, that individual choice matters, that voters have
decision-making power, was just too bitter a pill to swallow.
After the parliamentary election
results began coming in, the Kremlin made its second painfully obvious mistake.
Exit polls for Moscow that showed United Russia's share of the vote at a meager
27 percent miraculously disappeared from the website of the Public Opinion
Foundation, a leading polling agency known for its loyalty to the government.
While people around the world were watching the protest movement unfold in
Moscow, all that Russians could see on federal television were wildlife
programs and "nothing's happening" news.
Independent journalists and the
public were overwhelmed with disgust. A correspondent of Kommersant FM radio,
Stanislav Kucher, addressed Russia's infamously kowtowed broadcast journalists
with a stinging rebuke: "Thousands of people are pouring into the streets
of both capitals of what's for now our common homeland for the first time in 10
years, to say what they think about the elections. And yet the same television
stations that show the president say not a word about the protests -- that's just
unprofessional." Kucher added that television people hid "information
from millions of people"-- at minimum manipulating their attitude and at
maximum disgracing themselves and their profession.
The official information blockade
only contributed to the protest mood. More than 35,000 people signed up for the
Dec. 10 rally via Facebook, and after the initial hard-line reaction and
threats of using brutal force against the protesters, the authorities had to
relent. The opposition not only received an official sanction for the
demonstration, but the authorities also agreed to provide a
"corridor" for those choosing to gather closer to Red Square, so that
those protesters could march across the bridge to the other bank of the Moscow
River and join the bigger crowd.
So what comes next?
Moscow is no Tahrir, and what's
happening in Russia at the moment is not yet a revolution. But Dec. 10 was
indeed a historic moment: Thousands of Russians made it clear that they would
no longer be ignored. The authorities also realized that hard-line measures and
broadcast blockades would only worsen their position and that they must take
their critics into account.
The period until the March 4
presidential election is now of paramount importance. Even if Putin does return
to the presidency at that time, the powerful voice of discontent played out in
the streets and through social media will prove impossible for him to ignore. The
era of apathy is officially over.
No comments:
Post a Comment