Why Russia's ludicrous attempt to silence Alexey Navalny is a throwback
to the bad old times of Stalin and Khrushchev
"Russia is like a tub full of dough. You push your hand all the way
to the bottom, pull it out, and right before your eyes, the hole disappears,
and again, it is a tub full of dough," Nikita Khrushchev once said,
assessing the country he ruled.
The
former premier -- my great grandfather -- who 60 years ago denounced Joseph
Stalin and his pervasive security apparatus, must be turning in his grave.
Russia's legal institutions are still run
along the lines of Stalin's "show trials."
Following
the politically motivated prosecutions of former Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky
and feminist punk rock agitators Pussy Riot, the latest of these affairs is the ongoing sham trial of anti-corruption lawyer,
opposition activist, and blogger Alexey Navalny. A few years ago, Navalny began
speaking out against Russia's ruling party of "crooks and thieves" --
President Vladimir Putin's United Russia. A charismatic leader, Navalny headlined
protests against rigged parliamentary elections in 2011 and Putin's
presidential victory in 2012. Once an advisor to the governor of the Kirov
Region with alleged access to state property, in April Navalny was charged with
defrauding state-run Kirovles timber company of
16 million rubles ($530,000) and now faces up to ten years in prison. Last
year, the investigators deemed the charges bogus, but recently reinstated them, perhaps
because of Putin becoming increasingly fearful of Navalny's growing political
clout. His popularity now stands at almost 40 percent and
last month Navalny announced he would run for president in at attempt to unseat
Putin. No doubt the current president is not pleased. And it seems he's
resorted to the old handbook: after all, accusing anti-corruption activists of
corruption has long been a favorite Kremlin tactic.
The
trial has been on and off for the past month, but the last few days of the
procedure have been an embarrassment for the prosecution -- featuring a damning
testimony from its own witness, a Kirov region official, who
said that Navalny could not have stolen lumber from Kirovles as he didn't have
the power to do so. The court in turn declined Navalny's request to declare
last week's warrantless search of his Kirov office illegal. Another witness,
the company's former deputy director, said Navalny was guilty of advising on the unfair contracts, but once again (in testimony humiliating
to the state) admitted that Kirovles voluntarily agreed to his proposals. As
the audience began to chuckle, the ex-director angrily replied, "Are you
in the circus?" Most in the room indeed felt they were, as several other
witnesses had already testified they could not remember dealings with Navalny
at all. In any law-abiding state, one such statement should have been enough to
drop charges.
This is
just déjà vu all over again for Russians, who remember the show trials of the
1930s -- ponderous affairs with pre-fabricated guilty verdicts that ended in
thousands being sentenced to death or the gulag. Perversely, the trials were
held to demonstrate the USSR's "fairness" towards the accused, who,
terrified for their lives and their reputations, assisted in their own
prosecution, readily admitting to non-existent crimes.
Purge-era
charges ranged from attempting to assassinate Soviet leaders to spying for the
West. These accusations decimated the Soviet military leadership, dealing a
devastating blow before World War II. They swallowed among others Grigory
Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, the "old Bolsheviks," who used to share
power with Stalin after Vladimir Lenin's death, as well as Nikolai Bukharin, an
erudite editor of Pravda, once
known as the "Heir of Lenin."
Bukharin
had dared to challenge Stalin's supreme leadership by questioning the
government's lack of transparency, a crime that prompted a devious response. In
one well-known story from 1937, the Great Dictator saw the Heir of Lenin
standing in the Kremlin alone. "Why are you by yourself, Bukharchik?"
the leader gently asked, "Come closer, you are one of us." Bukharin
enthusiastically obliged but Stalin was just toying with him -- a week later
Bukharin was arrested, interrogated for months, and, after confessing to
threatening Stalin's life was executed for attempting to bring capitalism to
Russia.
Khrushchev,
at Stalin's side, was himself an enthusiastic participant in show trials,
including Bukharin's. After assuming power in 1953, the premier tried to atone
for his own despotic past by releasing or posthumously rehabilitating many
Gulag prisoners. Just in 1954-56 the number of "politicals" in Soviet
prisons dropped from at least half a million to a 100,000, but the old Bolsheviks'
deaths -- Zinoviev, Kamenev, Bukharin, and others -- remained hushed.
Ousted
from the Kremlin in 1964, Khrushchev regretted his dithering and, according to
my mother, once said at home: "I should have rehabilitated them. There was
no guilt! But I didn't want to embarrass communist leaders from abroad. They were
on their knees begging me to be silent."
My
grandfather pondered these questions as the show trials began to make their
return under his successor, Leonid Brezhnev. In 1965, writers Andrei Sinyavsky
and Yuly Daniel were arrested, and after a vociferous trial got sentenced to a
Gulag hard labor camp for publishing abroad their anti-Soviet works under
pseudonyms Abram Tertz and Nikolai Arzhak.
Fast-forward
another half-a-century -- through Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost when
Bukharin and everyone else were finally rehabilitated, through the chaotic
post-communist period when Gulags were firmly thought to be the thing of the
past -- and we find ourselves again staring at, or rather, living in,
Khrushchev's "tub full of dough."
Following
Stalin's example in perverse "justice," Putin has recently weighed in on the Navalny case: "People
get sentenced not for their political views or actions, but for abusing law....
And this and other cases should be treated extremely objective."
But
while Stalin's show trials bred fear in the observers and atonement from the
accused, the current leader's "objectivity" fools only a few. As many
as 52 percent "do not believe the trial to be objective."
A new public opinion poll shows that over half of the country
considers Putin's party hopelessly corrupt. And altogether it's rich irony that
Putin, who during his dozen years in power has reportedly amassed a $70 billion fortune, is judging Navalny and before him,
Khodorkovsky (once Russia's richest man), for abusing the law. In 2010, Putin
said about the former Yukos chief, "A thief should stay in jail." But
it was not thievery that brought Khodorkovsky's demise; it was his generous
contributions to opposition parties. Since 2003, he has endured numerous public
trials and is now exiled to a gulag in northern Russia until 2016. Recently his
sentence was reduced due to changes in the economic crimes law, but many are
skeptical that he will actually be released.
Similarly,
in 2012, Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot were
sentenced to two years in the Soviet-era camps.
Indeed,
in Russia, history repeats itself -- in a twist on Karl Marx's dictum -- as
tragedy and farce all at once. Cases are decided on the whim of the
authorities, because with us power is subject to inertia with an apathetic
public traditionally surrendering to the country's paradox of tyranny: a weak
state functions as strong by depriving citizens of basic liberties. In the
absence of the rule of law, Russians perceive themselves as subordinate to the
state rather than as citizens acting out lives in an independent civil society.
This de
facto surrender creates a fertile environment for despotism, squashing
most political initiatives.
And yet
we evolve, slowly. Russians went to the streets after the 2011 rigged
parliamentary elections; they opposed the 2012 presidential elections, which
"unfairly" and "unfreely," as stated by the protest slogans, brought
Putin back for his third term as head of state. Now only 26 percent of the country says they would support Putin in his fourth 2018
presidential term. And the new show trials revealing an occurring shift.
Neither Navalny, nor Khodorkovsky has admitted any guilt. Instead, they
continue to speak out from prison cells and courtrooms.
Are we
almost free from the stagnant "dough"? Khrushchev repeatedly stated
at home and wrote in his memoirs that his own experience with
despotism -- only after Stalin's death did he repent; and he denounced the man,
not his system -- taught him that focusing on the leader rather than
functioning institutions was only half the victory.
Stolen
elections don't start with manipulated ballots or banned alternative candidates.
They begin when people allow the legal system to go awry. And Russia kept
silent for almost a decade while Khodorkovsky was repeatedly denied justice.
The truth is that we have the legal system we deserve. The question today is
not whether Navalny gets acquitted by the courts; it is how angry we'll get
when he isn't.
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