Ex-Yeltsin aide says Russia risks collapse

Someoneforyou

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Ex-Yeltsin aide says Russia risks collapse
Russia - 16 August 2011

MOSCOW - Russia could break up like the Soviet Union did 20 years ago if its leaders fail to modernize the country, one of the main architects of Russian reforms in the early 1990s said.

Gennady Burbulis, who was with Russian President Boris Yeltsin when he climbed on to a tank to lead resistance to a hardline Communist coup in August 1991, said there was a lack of democracy, civil society and media freedoms 20 years later.

"My main anxiety 20 years on is the threat of the Russian Federation falling apart," Burbulis, a top Yeltsin aide until late 1992, told Reuters in an interview marking the failed coup's 20th anniversary.

"The threat is huge if this regime cannot transform itself. The threat, ultimately, is the disintegration of Russia."

Many political analysts said Russia was in danger of disintegrating during the chaotic 1990s when many of Russia's regions, some of them thousands of kilometers from Moscow and in different time zones, sought autonomy from the center and Chechnya fought unsuccessfully for its independence.

Yeltsin's successor as president, Vladimir Putin, is widely credited with reining in the unruly regions, strengthening central authority and consolidating his own power.

But Burbulis echoed other critics of Putin by warning of dangers to the central government, and possibly unrest, if it fails to increase democracy and carry out long-delayed reforms to modernize the country and its aging infrastructure.

"Modernization is vital," he said. "I am convinced we will have to start modernizing the system and restoring the values we managed to defend in such a tough battle in 1991. Russia has no other path to follow if it is to develop."

WRONG TURNINGS ON REFORM PATH

Burbulis, now 66, made clear he was disappointed with how the political system had developed since the failed coup.

Historians say the putsch, which was intended to preserve the Soviet Union, had the opposite effect by accelerating its collapse because reformers quickly seized their chance to bury the Soviet empire when it failed.

Burbulis said a gradual transformation of the Soviet Union might have been possible if the coup had not taken place, but its sudden demise was comparable to the meltdown at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in 1986.

He made clear that in the haste to carry out reforms, not enough care had been taken to prevent communist elites regrouping and holding posts in the new Russia.

"I came with time to see that the August 1991 putsch was the political Chernobyl of the Soviet empire," said Burbulis, who now runs the Strategia think tank in Moscow.

"It was a political explosion of the totalitarian system which threw out all the poison of the Communist, Bolshevik system of power that had piled up over 70 years."

The failure to eliminate all communist influence at that time was still being felt today, he said, with some Russian leaders sympathizing with some of the coup plotters' goals.

He gave no examples. But Putin, who is now prime minister, has referred to the collapse of the Soviet empire as the "greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century."

Putin's supporters say he has done much to restore order to Russia, hold the country together and increase private incomes.

But Burbulis regretted Russia's 1993 constitution had been trampled on by its leaders, including at times Yeltsin, and said the rule of law and independence of the judiciary was tarnished.

"This is a regime of authoritarian rule which neglects the competition of ideas and public views," he said.

"It might be different if we had kept competition, genuine elections -- including in the regions -- and developed a fully-fledged civil society. The sad thing is that we have lost the greatest achievement of the first period of the Yeltsin era -- real freedom of the media and freedom of speech."



Source: Reuters
 

pmaitra

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Important dates and events:

On March 17, 1991, in a Union-wide referendum 76.4% of all voters voted for the retention of the Soviet Union in a reformed form.
On August 19, 1991, Gorbachev's vice president Gennadi Yanayev, prime minister Valentin Pavlov, defense minister Dmitriy Yazov, KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov, and other senior officials acted to prevent the signing of the union treaty by forming the "General Committee on the State Emergency."
Faced with growing republic separatism, Gorbachev attempted to restructure the Soviet Union into a less centralized state. On August 20, 1991, the Russian SFSR was scheduled to sign the New Union Treaty, which was to convert the Soviet Union into a federation of independent republics with a common president, foreign policy and military.
After three days, on August 21, 1991, the coup collapsed, the organizers were detained, and Gorbachev returned as president of the Soviet Union. However, Gorbachev's powers were now compromised, as neither the Union nor Russian power structures heeded his commands.
On December 8, 1991, the leaders of the Russian, Ukrainian, and Byelorussian republics met in Belavezhskaya Pushcha and signed the Belavezha Accords declaring the Soviet Union dissolved and replacing it with the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Gorbachev described this as an unconstitutional coup, but it soon became clear that the development could not be halted.
Source: Dissolution of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

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