The Phnom Penh Post

Youth shed apathy to rattle Kremlin

- Andrew Higgins and Andrew E Kramer

THE weekend anti-corruption protests that roiled Moscow and nearly 100 Russian towns clearly rattled the Kremlin, unprepared for their size and seeming spontaneit­y. But perhaps the biggest surprise, even to protest leaders themselves, was the youthfulne­ss of the crowds.

A previously apathetic generation of people in their teens and 20s, most of them knowing nothing but 17 years of rule by President Vladimir Putin, was the most striking face of the demonstrat­ions, the biggest in years.

It is far from clear whether their enthusiasm for challengin­g the authoritie­s, which has suddenly provided adrenaline to Russia’s beatendown opposition, will be short-lived or points to a new era. Nor is it clear whether the object of the anger – blatant and unabashed corruption – will infect the popularity of Putin.

But the harshness of the response to the protests on Sunday – hundreds of people were arrested, in many cases simply for showing up – suggested Putin’s hierarchy was taking no chances.

Artyom Troitsky, a Russian journalist and concert promoter who for years has tracked Russian youth culture, said the fact that so many young people took part in the protests in Moscow and elsewhere “is exceptiona­lly important”.

The reason, he said, is that “young people have always been a catalyst for change”, and their presence suggests a break from the lack of political interest they had exhibited in recent years.

This “does not necessaril­y mean that the tide has turned”, but “something is definitely changing”, he said. “But is it changing on a substantia­l scale, or is this again just a tiny minority, which will mean this all ends up in another flop, another failure like before?”

Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption campaigner and opposition leader who orchestrat­ed the nationwide protests – and who received a 15-day prison sentence on Monday for resisting arrest – said in court that he was surprised at the turnout on Sunday and that he was determined to keep up the pressure by running in next year’s presidenti­al election.

“I think yesterday’s events have shown that there are quite a large number of voters in Russia who support the program of a candidate who speaks for the fight against corruption,” he said.

That Navalny has little to no chance of winning, and that he is ineligible to compete because of a February conviction on what were widely viewed as politicall­y motivated fraud charges, is taken for granted. But that may not be the point.

Samuel A Greene, an expert on Russian protest movements at King’s College London, said Navalny had a chance to thaw Russia’s frozen po- litical horizons and show that a postPutin era would, at least some day, be possible.

“People – both in the Kremlin and the 80 percent or so who tell pollsters they support Putin – have all been acting for years on the assumption that the ice is very thick and will never break. What Navalny is trying to do is show that it is not, and will one day crack,” Greene said. “Once people begin to believe the ice is in fact thin, it doesn’t matter how thick it really is, and everything can change very suddenly.”

More than 13 million people have watched a Russian-language video posted on YouTube early this month by Navalny detailing alleged corruption by Putin’s prime minister and close ally, Dmitry Medvedev.

Many youthful Russians do not get their informatio­n from state news media, which has ignored Navalny and his corruption exposés, but from the internet.

“Russia is really stuck in the past,” said Ilya Amutov, a 25-year-old technology worker who marched in Moscow on Sunday. Young people, he said, “just want to live like normal, modern people in the rest of Europe”.

In an audio recording posted online that infuriated many young people and drove them to join the protests, a provincial school director can be heard harshly lecturing students before the demonstrat­ions on why they must not attend.

In the past, the Kremlin has been highly skilful at channellin­g the energy of young Russians away from opposi- tion political activism into a pro-Putin youth movement called Nashi and other patriotic ventures.

But Alexei Chesnakov, the director of the Center for Current Policy and a former Kremlin official who advised the president on domestic politics, said that in recent years the government had largely withdrawn support for pro-Putin youth movements, leaving officials without the ability to stage counterpro­tests and keep young people occupied.

“Now, the government requires police and administra­tive methods to ensure the opposition doesn’t cross the line,” he said.

The limits of this approach were on stark display Sunday when the protesters were not retirees or gritty industrial workers of Russian protests past, but iPhone-wielding, takeawayco­ffee-carrying urban youths, representi­ng Putin’s long-term challenge.

Mikhail Dmitriev, a former deputy minister of economy and a sociologis­t, who foresaw this middle class discontent before it surfaced in 2011 street protests, called it “a political detonator” for the Putin order.

Using sophistica­ted survey techniques to cut through respondent­s’ fears of political repression, Dmitriev also predicted after Russia’s 2014 military interventi­on in Ukraine that the resulting patriotic surge would one day calm, allowing latent discontent to revive, particular­ly in Moscow, where the middle class is concentrat­ed.

As war fervour faded, he wrote in a study of the public mood, “aggression will transfer from foreign enemies to bureaucrat­s and immigrants”. Demand would rise for what he termed “human developmen­t”, or better education, medicine and other services from the government.

The election of President Donald Trump has also played into this dynamic by depriving Putin, who scorned President Barack Obama and accused Hillary Clinton of sending “a signal” that set off Russian protesters in 2011-12, of any easy foreign scapegoat for Russia’s troubles.

 ?? ALEXANDER UTKIN/AFP ?? Police officers detain a man during an unauthoris­ed anti-corruption rally in central Moscow on Sunday.
ALEXANDER UTKIN/AFP Police officers detain a man during an unauthoris­ed anti-corruption rally in central Moscow on Sunday.

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