From MT:
“A Beginner's Guide to Russia's Fragmented Opposition”
(Russians in Prague protesting against the war in Ukraine.)
The political repression driven by the invasion of Ukraine
has drastically altered the landscape of Russia’s disparate opposition. While
some well-established movements such as Alexei Navalny’s Anti-Corruption
Foundation have been forced to shut down inside Russia entirely, other
initiatives to unite those opposed to the war in Ukraine have sprung up in
their place. To make sense of the fractured Russian
opposition a year into the war, The Moscow Times has compiled a list of the
nine largest and most notable movements — both inside the country and among the
Russian diaspora — abroad - advocating for a future without Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
The Congress of People’s Deputies
Taking its name from the last Soviet parliament, the Congress
of People’s Deputies of Russia aims to create a body of former Russian
lawmakers in exile, which, the organizers claim, will be prepared to assume the
role of a transitional government in the event of Putin’s removal from power. Leaders of the initiative, including former
State Duma deputies Ilya Ponomarev and Gennady Gudkov and lawyers Mark Feygin
and Yelena Lukianova, stake their claim to legitimacy as leaders of the
opposition based on having won Russian elections at various levels in the
past. The Congress’s first session, a three-day
event that took place in Poland in November, was marred by factional rivalries
and saw several potential members withdraw from the coalition citing concerns
about its legitimacy in the eyes of the Russian public.
Feminist Anti-War Resistance
Founded by feminist activists Daria Serenko and Ella Rosman
just hours after the invasion of Ukraine began, Feminist Anti-War Resistance
(FAR) swiftly became a leading force behind protests against the war both
within Russia and abroad. “We are the
resistance to the war, to patriarchy, to authoritarianism and militarism. We
are the future and we will win,” reads FAR’s manifesto, which was published on
Feb. 25 last year. The organization’s decentralized, horizontal
structure, which allows virtually anyone who shares its values to participate
in its activities and use its symbols, has ensured the swift spread of FAR
“cells” across Russia’s regions as well as in over 20 other countries. With the safety of its activists in mind, FAR
uses an array of non-violent protest methods that go far beyond traditional
demonstrations and single-person pickets. FAR activists have written anti-war
slogans on banknotes circulating within Russia, installed anti-war art in
public spaces across the country and have even handed out flowers on the
streets to get their message across. Another atypical form of protest that sets
the group apart is its use of flashmobs, including one in the Moscow metro
where members held public crying sessions to protest the war. The organization
also produces “Female Truth,” an anti-war newspaper that is published online and
distributed in print by FAR activists across Russia.
The Free Nations League
Established in May, the Free Nations League is a platform
uniting pro-sovereignty movements and individual activists representing the
indigenous peoples of Russia, including Bashkirs, Buryats, Chechens, Erzya and
Tatars. Highlighting the colonial
undertones of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, The Free Nations League positions
itself as an “anti-imperialist movement” that seeks independence for Russia’s
ethnic republics. Members of the League have been spotted attending the Free
Nations of Post-Russia Forum, which aims to foster discussion and create a plan
for the dissolution of the Russian Federation in its present form. The gathering, which is also linked to
Ponomarev of the Congress of People’s Deputies, was criticized both by
pro-Kremlin forces and other segments of the opposition, both of which
questioned its legitimacy.
The Free Russia Forum
Established in 2016 by
chess-grandmaster-turned-political-activist Garry Kasparov and opposition
politician Ivan Tutrin, The Free Russia Forum (FRF) works to unite an array of
Russia’s opposition-minded activists and “create intellectual alternatives to
Putin’s regime.” Based in Lithuania, FRF has convened 11 times since its
founding and has held three anti-war conferences in Vilnius since the start of
the invasion. The Russian authorities added the platform to
its list of “undesirable” organizations in February, saying it posed “a threat
to the constitutional order and security of the Russian Federation.” Though
Russian law requires organizations labeled as “undesirable” to disband, FRF has
said the platform did not “intend to stop its activities, including those on
Russian territory.”
Indigenous Anti-War Movements
There is mounting evidence that the war in Ukraine has seen a
disproportionate share of deaths on the Russian side being borne by soldiers from
the country’s minority ethnic communities, many of which are already blighted
by poverty and have long been subject to official discrimination. This has paved the way for the creation of an
array of anti-war movements representing non-Slavic indigenous peoples of
Russia such as the Free Buryatia Foundation, Free Yakutia Foundation, Free
Kalmykia Foundation and Bashkortostan’s Akbuzat movement. Facilitated by the
work of volunteers — most of whom are members of the diaspora living outside of
Russia — the various movements concentrate on helping conscientious objectors
and anyone attempting to flee conscription, combatting Kremlin propaganda and
raising awareness of the systemic discrimination.
Team Khodorkovsky
Oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky entered Russia’s political
landscape in 2001 with the launch of Open Russia Foundation, which then worked
to “strengthen civil society in Russia.” His decade-long imprisonment on
embezzlement charges stifled his political activities, but following his
release in 2013 the erstwhile richest man in Russia re-launched the foundation
from London where he remains in exile. The
Open Russia Foundation was forced to disband in 2021 after being labeled
“undesirable” by the Russian authorities. But Khodorkovsky, who voiced his
ambition to become the next Russian president, has retained a high profile in
the media due mainly to his YouTube channel — which boasts over 1 million
subscribers — where he posts commentary
on current events, and the YouTube news project Open Media.
Team Navalny
While Navalny remains the best-known Russian opposition
politician outside Russia, he and his Anti-Corruption Foundation have been less
successful at dominating the political agenda since Navalny was imprisoned and
his political network blacklisted as a “terrorist organization” by the Kremlin
in 2021. Most of Navalny’s closest allies have now left Russia for fear of
arrest, but they have worked hard to continue their movement’s work from abroad
in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Days after the start of the war, Navalny’s
team launched the YouTube-based media project Popular Politics. With over 1.7
million subscribers, the project has allowed Navalny’s key allies to maintain a
high profile in the Russia mediascape, including his right-hand-man Leonid
Volkov and lawyer Lyubov Sobol. In
October, Navalny’s team pledged to relaunch its in-country political network,
which at one point had 50 regional headquarters, “to fight mobilization and
war.” In January, the group launched the “Free Navalny” campaign, an attempt to
coordinate global efforts to free the Kremlin’s chief nemesis.
The Russian Anti-War Committee
The Russian Anti-War Committee was created by some of the
most prominent exiled members of Russia’s liberal opposition, including former
oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovksy, chess grandmaster and political activist Garry
Kasparov, jailed Kremlin critic Vladimir Kara-Murza and businessmen Boris Zimin
and Yevgeny Chichvarkin. The Anti-War
Committee’s initiatives include a group set up to provide humanitarian
assistance to Ukraine and the Kovcheg Foundation, which assists recent Russian
emigres with resettlement. The Anti-War
Committee’s best-known side project is the Russian Action Committee, which aims
to provide “every progressive Russian” with a platform for declaring their
anti-war stance. At its first gathering
in Lithuania last year, leaders of the Action Committee proposed creating a
legal mechanism that would allow Russian citizens with anti-war positions to
bypass Western sanctions. The proposal was quickly dubbed “the good Russian
passport” and suffered widespread ridicule.
Vesna
Founded in 2013 by former members of Russia’s liberal Yabloko
party, Vesna has grown into one of the largest opposition networks in modern
Russia and a de-facto leader of the anti-war street protest movement. Observing
the principle of nonviolence, the group became known for its creative protest
acts, including those against Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and against
the corruption around Russia’s 2018 hosting of the World Cup. Members of Vesna were involved in coordinating
the initial protests against the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022,
which led to the arrest of some of its members and the opening of two criminal
cases against the organization. The
Russian authorities added Vesna to its list of terrorist and extremist
organizations in October last year, just days after Russia’s major cities were
shaken by anti-mobilization protests. Though Vesna chose not to disband the
movement, it halted the growth of its network inside of Russia citing safety
concerns and elected to focus its efforts on growing its support among the
rapidly growing Russian diaspora.
^ If all the different Russian Opposition Groups could get
their acts together and join forces under 1 Leadership they could help end
Russia’s War in Ukraine and the slaughter of thousands, end the Russian War
Crimes and try to save Russia and the Russian People from anyone innocent blood
on their hands. ^
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/03/06/a-beginners-guide-to-russias-fragmented-opposition-a80262
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