|
RUSSIA: The Perils of Putinism
By Arnold Beichman
Russia reverts to form—and to despots. By Arnold Beichman.
Every day in every way things worsen in Vladimir
Putin’s Russia. Putinism in the twenty-first century has become as
significant a watchword as Sta-linism was in the twentieth. The Putinist
regime’s behavior has raised a question historians have asked
repeatedly: Why is Russia unable to sustain a democratic form of
government, a state based on the rule of law, not on the rule of a dictator
or a Politburo?
|
|
Vladimir Putin by Taylor Jones for the Hoover Digest.
|
Except for a brief period during the postczarist
Kerensky regime, Russia’s history is a sequence of one Ivan the
Terrible after another. Why, with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
has a KGB officer become the country’s president?
The Moscow correspondent for the London Daily Telegraph has just
reported that a group of human rights activists has been found guilty of
organizing an “unsanctioned” afternoon tea party
with—zounds!—two Westerners.
Another Putinist victim, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, onetime
oil magnate, has paid the price for being a Putin challenger. Khodorkovsky
was already in a Siberian prison camp serving an eight-year sentence, to
which now has been added a 15-year sentence. The facts in the case
don’t matter. Putinism matters.
In fact, as the Wall
Street Journal pointed out on February 7,
since the murder of TV personality Vladislav Listyev 12 years ago, no one
has been successfully prosecuted for a high-profile assassination inside
Russia. Last October, Anna Politkovskaya, a courageous journalist who
accused President Putin of throttling democracy, was shot in broad
daylight. Her killer has yet to be found, if he is even being sought by the
police.
Putinism means no bill of rights, no right of free
speech, no right of free press, no right to assemble or seek redress of
grievances, no right against unlawful search and seizure, no habeas corpus,
the essential foundation of any country blessed by a rule of law. How can
there be a separation of powers—legislative, executive, and
judicial—when one man wields all power? Is there an independent
judiciary in Putin’s Russia? There is not. There may even be a
revival of what in Soviet days was called “telephone justice,”
in which the dictator or his lackeys notify judges of their wishes about
the outcome of a particular case.
|
Since the murder of TV personality Vladislav Listyev 12 years ago,
no one has been successfully prosecuted for a high-profile assassination inside Russia.
|
The nine arrested human rights activists were members
of Froda, an organization that campaigns for ethnic minority rights. Their
crime? Meeting with two German students who were visiting a friend in the
southern Russian city of Novorossiysk.
“We were told that citizens were forbidden to
gather and ordered to make a written explanation,” said Tamara
Karastelyova, Froda’s director. “We were told that under the
new law, any meeting of two or more people with the purpose of discussing
publicly important issues had to be sanctioned by the local administration
three days in advance.”
Two years ago, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice expressed concern about legislation making its way through the Russian
parliament that would severely limit the activities of nongovernmental
organizations.
“Democracy is built, of course, on elections,
and it’s built on parliaments, and it’s built on principles
like the rule of law and freedom of speech,” she said. “But it
is also built on the ability of citizens to associate themselves freely and
work to bring their government into a particular direction. And the role of
nongovernmental organizations that have been working in Russia and in other
newly independent states of the former Soviet Union is simply trying to
help citizens to organize themselves better, to petition their government
to make changes in the policies that affect their very lives.”
|
Putinism means no bill of rights, no right of free speech, no right of free press, no right to assemble and to seek redress of grievances, no right against unlawful search and seizure, no habeas corpus.
|
Several years ago, President Bush said about Putin:
“I looked the man in the eye. I was able to get a sense of his
soul.” Look again, Mr. President.
This essay appeared in the Washington Times on February 11, 2007.
Available from the Hoover Press is Economic Transition
in Eastern Europe and Russia: Realities of Reform, edited by Edward P.
Lazear. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Arnold Beichman, a political scientist, writer, and former journalist, has been a visiting scholar and research fellow at the Hoover Institution since 1982.
|