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Trešdiena, 25. decembris
Stella, Larisa

Illegal VIP Hunting of Endangered Species Outrages Russians

The refusal of Russian prosecutors to open a

criminal case against VIPs who engage in the hunting of endangered species

is transforming what had been an ecological protest into a political one, a

situation that the powers that be have exacerbated by their propaganda

campaign against the defenders of wildlife.

On Saturday, some 80 people assembled in Moscow to protest both

hunting of endangered species by VIPs and the unwillingness of the

government to open a criminal case against those involved, even as officials

in the Altay Republic blocked plans for a demonstration there (

www.rabkor.ru/?area=articleItem&id=2002).

These protests, which followed an earlier round in February,

were the latest response to coverage of a helicopter crash on January 9th in

which Aleksandr Kosopkin, the presidential representative to the Duma, and

several other officials who were hunting the endangered mountain sheep in an

area sacred to the indigenous peoples of the Altay region, died.

Participants in the Moscow meeting held up signs accusing the

VIPs who had been involved of poaching, noting that such crimes are

increasingly widespread across the Russian Federation, and demanding that

both those who survived the January crash and others involved in illegal

hunting be forced from office and brought to justice.

Speakers called on President Dmitry Medvedev "give provide a

moral assessment of the activities of people who hunt rare animals,"

something that is particularly important they said because lower-ranking

officials and prosecutors have refused to bring charges against the VIPs

involved.

At a press conference before the protest, Igor Chestin, the head

of the Russian section of the World Wildlife Fund, said that the January

case highlighted a growing problem, and he said his organization's website

had collected 6,000 signatures on an appeal to President Medvedev calling on

him to take action (www.sobkorr.ru/news/49B111FA2AD3A.html).

What the Kremlin leader does will be "a litmus test for all the

declarations of the president about the struggle with corruption," he

continued, because it will show whether the regime is serious about having

its officials obey the law. But the situation was not promising as

officials had not only refused to open a criminal case but also put the

investigation under seal.

* *Aleksey Yablokov, a leading Russian ecologist, seconded that

view: "The silence of the powers that be [in this case] is also an answer.

It is a signal to its own people – do what you want, we will not punish

you." He called for new laws that would not only prevent such hunting but

punish those with trophies from it (www.rabkor.ru/?area=articleItem&id=1993

).

And Akay Kanyyev, the leader of the Movement for the Cultural

Revival of the Altay who has demanded that the January hunt be investigated,

said that the authorities there have unleashed "a propaganda war" against

his group, putting out stories that it wants to unite the Altay Republic

with the Altay kray, something that the movement in fact opposes.

He said that the authorities both in Moscow and in the Altay had

failed to reckon that the people of the Altay are furious about this case

because they consider both the mountain sheep and the place where that

animal is found sacred. Consequently, what the Russian officials had done

was triply wrong.

In a commentary on this sequence of events, Moscow social critic

Boris Kagarlitsky argues that it both highlights problems within the elite –

he suggests that the entire crash would have been covered up unless someone

from on high wanted it exposed – and increasingly within the population more

generally (www.rabkor.ru/?area=authoredArticleItem&id=1965).

Because of official clumsiness in the Altay, what had been "an

ecological case" is rapidly being "transformed into a political one," the

Moscow writer says, noting that those calling for an investigation have now

been denounced for supposedly wanting an "orange" revolution in the Altay or

even the transfer of that region from Russia to Mongolia.

The officials fail to understand that what these protests are

about is not the protection of this or that animal but rather the issue of

"the equality of citizens before the law. If the VIP poachers are not

punished, that will send a clear signal that members of the Russian elite

view themselves as "standing above the law and the Constitution."

But Kagarlitsky admits that the powers that be have a problem:

If they do not punish these people, popular anger will grow, but if they do,

then "public opinion will begin to feel its own strength. In either case,

the government will have helped to "transform the passive observer into a

protesting citizen."

Uzmanību!

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