Hotmail  |  Gmail  |  Yahoo  |  Justice Mail
powered by Google
WWW http://www.JusticeForNorthCaucasus.com

Add JFNC Google Bar Button to your Browser Google Bar Group  
 
 
Welcome To Justice For North Caucasus Group

Log in to your account at Justice For North Caucasus eMail system.

Request your eMail address

eMaill a Friend About This Site.

Google Translation

 

 

Window On Eurasia: Medvedev Has No Solution For North Caucasus, Moscow Editors Say

posted by eagle on August, 2010 as ANALYSIS / OPINION


SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 2010

Window on Eurasia: Medvedev has No Solution for North Caucasus, Moscow Editors Say

Paul Goble

Staunton, August 14 – As his meetings in the North Caucasus this week showed, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is seeking to find a system of administration for that region and others that is not based on either corruption or massive force, but the editors of two leading Moscow news outlets suggest that he has not found an alternative to what is taking there.
And as a result, the editors of "Nezavisimaya gazeta” and "Gazeta.ru” suggest, Medvedev for all his calls to create a law-based state in that region as well as in the rest of Russia has not yet shown that he can implement that program or even that, given conditions in that region and more generally, whether such a program could be implemented at all.
In a leading article published yesterday, the editors of "Nezavisimaya” say that the Sochi meeting earlier this week demonstrated that Medvedev is "dissatisfied with the existing system of administration at the level of the regions,” one in which corruption and force remain endemic (www.ng.ru/editorial/2010-08-13/2_red.html).
The Russian president said that "it is necessary to conduct a real struggle with corruption and not just with the trading of positions.” Otherwise, he continued, "there will not be any result.” According to the paper, "the key phrase” here is "trading of positions,” because it reflects "the historically evolved motivational basis of the Russian powers that be.”
The current heads of the regions, "Nezavisimaya” says, "can hardly be considered professional administrators,” regardless of what Moscow may have expected when it eliminated elections for those positions. Instead, "they more often play the role of watchers” for the center who run their domains "by means of individual will.”
In doing so, they operate most of the time "on two basic stimuli – fear and greed,” and "one of the most powerful levels are the financial flows which are controlled by the governors.” (As the paper points out, "the alternative in the existing set of social relations could be if you will only repression of a Stalinist type.”)
Regional heads who do not make use of the financial resources they control in order to build their own power "quickly are eaten alive by their political opponents who make use of the mass media which they support and the social organizations which they control.” Consequently, the heads have no choice but to deploy these funds as the most effective means of governance.
"Corruption in the classical sense,” the paper’s editors continue, is defined as an inclination to theft. However, in Russia, it traditionally is one of the instruments of administration of the regions,” an arrangement that Medvedev finds ever less to his liking and one that he clearly would like to change.
As he has often said, he wants to "oppose to the existing system a new and contemporary one” that would be "based on law and conscience.” But unfortunately, "Nezavisimaya” continues, "Medvedev himself does not have an answer to the question of how to make such a scheme work.”
For most of its history,” the editors point out, "Russia has lived with a system based either on fear or on regulated resource flows or ‘feeding’” of officials. Medvedev does not want either, but the paper suggests, he does not recognize that making use of Western models, themselves not free from corruption, won’t necessarily work.
And as a result, even as Medvedev complains about corruption, the governors, especially in the North Caucasus, will find themselves compelled to make use of its specifically Russian form. Otherwise, they would lose control of the situation, and the center would be forced to withdraw or introduce draconian force.
Meanwhile, the same day, the editors of Gazeta.ru reach a similar conclusion. They suggest that Medvedev and others in Moscow who think as he does may finally be losing their illusions and that "the Kremlin does not have in reserve” any policy but the continued disbursement of funds (www.gazeta.ru/comments/2010/08/13_e_3407291.shtml).
That represents a particular problem for Medvedev because it is obvious that he is "searching for a formula of North Caucasus regulation” which will be an alternative to the one which Ramzan Kadyrov has made in Chechnya” with Grozny’s unpleasant combination of force and corruption covered by constant declarations of loyalty.
It should have surprised no one that Medvedev would like another way forward, but what is "surprising is something else:” the apparent willingness of Medvedev and others to believe that "the purely technocratic approach of [Presidential plenipotentiary] Aleksandr Khloponin” was "suitable for realization in the Russian Caucasus and in particular in Daghestan.”
That approach, based on the assumption that the only thing necessary is "to send investments there and help with advice and control” and then "life will settle down and the economy will work. If not just like in Moscow then perhaps as in Moscow oblast. Tourists will then come. Like in Sochi.”
But in fact, as the recent change at the top in Daghestan shows, Moscow has continued to rely on leaders of clans, who build their power by the channeling of funds to associates. Moscow and Medvedev need to understand "it is impossible to use this circle of people as one of the bases of support and at the same time seriously struggle with those on whom these people stand.”
Unfortunately, the editors conclude, "the North Caucasus societal crisis …de our common state and social illnesses, does not provide any hope that in the foreseeable future, this region will stand on its own even in an economic sense.” And that means Moscow has little choice but "to pay and pay” corrupt regimes, even if Medvedev would like to do otherwise

comments (0)


1 - 1 of 1

Post comment

Your name*

Email address*

Url

Comments*

Verification code*







 RSS FEED


New Posts



Search Analysis Opinion



ANALYSIS / OPINION



Archive


 december 2013

 november 2013

 october 2013

 september 2013

 august 2013

 july 2013

 june 2013

 may 2013

 april 2013

 march 2013

 february 2013

 december 2012

 august 2012

 july 2012

 april 2012

 march 2012

 february 2012

 july 2011

 june 2011

 may 2011

 april 2011

 march 2011

 february 2011

 january 2011

 december 2010

 november 2010

 october 2010

 september 2010

 august 2010

 july 2010

 june 2010

 may 2010

 april 2010

 march 2010

 february 2010

 january 2010

 december 2009

 november 2009

 october 2009

 september 2009

 august 2009

 july 2009

 june 2009

 may 2009

 april 2009

 march 2009

 february 2009

 january 2009

 december 2008

 november 2008

 october 2008

 august 2008

 july 2008

 may 2008

 february 2008

 december 2007

 november 2007

 october 2007

 september 2007

 august 2007

 july 2007

 june 2007

 may 2007

 april 2007

 march 2007

 february 2007

 january 2007

 december 2006

 november 2006

 october 2006

 september 2006

 august 2006

 july 2006

 june 2006

 may 2006

 april 2006

 march 2006

 february 2006

 january 2006

 december 2005

 november 2005

 october 2005

 september 2005

 august 2005

 july 2005

 june 2005

 may 2005

 april 2005

 april 2000

 february 2000



Acknowledgement: All available information and documents in "Justice For North Caucasus Group" is provided for the "fair use". There should be no intention for ill-usage of any sort of any published item for commercial purposes and in any way or form. JFNC is a nonprofit group and has no intentions for the distribution of information for commercial or advantageous gain. At the same time consideration is ascertained that all different visions, beliefs, presentations and opinions will be presented to visitors and readers of all message boards of this site. Providing, furnishing, posting and publishing the information of all sources is considered a right to freedom of opinion, speech, expression, and information while at the same time does not necessarily reflect, represent, constitute, or comprise the stand or the opinion of this group. If you have any concerns contact us directly at: eagle@JusticeForNorthCaucasus.com


Page Last Updated: {Site best Viewed in MS-IE 1024x768 or Greater}Copyright © 2005-2009 by Justice For North Caucasus ®