Russia before the elections

The following article was published in "The Guardian", newspaper
of the Communist Party of Australia in its issue of Wednesday,
September 22nd, 1999. Contact address: 65 Campbell Street, Surry Hills.
Sydney. 2010 Australia. Phone: (612) 9212 6855 Fax: (612) 9281 5795.
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Peter Symon, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of
Australia, made a short visit to Moscow recently. Here are some
of his observations.

On September 1, children returned to the 1,400 Moscow primary
schools to commence the new school year following the long summer
holidays. Universities and other educational institutions also
opened their doors on the same day.

For primary schools, it is a big day -- a sort of celebration for
students and their parents. Every child brings a bunch of flowers
for their teacher and is dressed in their best. They assemble and
stand behind their class teacher on the school grounds.

It is a ceremony which has continued virtually unchanged from
Soviet times. The children's songs played over the public address
system are the same.

The first year new-comers are given pride of place and are
presented by the school graduates from the previous year with a
�book. Short speeches of welcome are made. Cameras and video-
recorders abound as supportive parents record the occasion.

Then class teachers lead off their children to start work for the
year. Text books are issued for the new year helped by money
collected by parents.

During the ceremony coloured balloons are released to float sky-
wards. The teacher of one class told her young students that the
balloons floated up to heaven!

On the surface things may look much the same but in other
respects a division between the rich and the poor is beginning to
appear as private schools charging fees begin to make their
appearance.

Also absent from the ceremony now are the young pioneers with
their enthusiasm and their red scarves. The authorities have
replaced this organisation with -- nothing.

The red hammer and sickle flag is also absent, having been
replaced with the very ordinary red, white and blue tricolour of
Yeltsin's Russian Federation.

Some things have changed but, on the other hand, much remains the
same.

The Moscow Metro, that symbol of Soviet construction, remains
scrupulously clean and tidy, handling millions of commuters every
day. It also remains, so far, a publicly owned enterprise.

The real difference is that the fare has gone up from five
kopecks to four rubles -- an increase of 80 times. Electronic
ticketing has also been introduced.

Moscow Metro

Every Metro station is now surrounded by a market made up of
hundreds of small stalls selling the necessities of life --
fruit, vegetables, butter, milk, cheese, bread, tinned foods,
meats, items of clothing, footwear, etc.

These markets are jam-packed with shoppers while the supermarket-
style shops are mostly empty. The simple reason is that prices
are lower at these markets and everyone shops around for the
lowest prices.

There are also a number of mostly elderly women standing shoulder
to shoulder offering a few items of clothing, cigarettes, embroidery,
etc, to passers-by.

They are obviously there, standing hour after hour in all
weathers, in an attempt to supplement meagre wages or pensions.

There is an abundance of local and imported goods, at least in
�Moscow. However, the market rules or, more likely, the mafia, as
it is reported that the innumerable stall-holders are required to
pay protection money. Furthermore, a large number of individual
petty traders are being created.

Gone are the low and controlled prices of Soviet times. Prices
vary, but generally, seem to relate to those paid in Australia.
The real difference is in the wages paid.

In August, the newspaper "Argument and Fact" printed some
statistics which dramatically reveal the declining standard of
living for most:

The cost of a basket of 25 items required for a month's minimum
consumption increased in price for a Muscovite from 314 rubles in
July '98 to 778 rubles in July '99. The increase in prices caused
a considerable slump in sales.

The newspaper recorded a 29 per cent drop in the volume of sales
in the retail trade; a 24 per cent drop in foodstuffs; 33 per
cent in industrial products and a 35 per cent drop in the turn-
over of restaurants, cafeterias and take-aways -- all in one
year!

I visited an office in what was formerly a huge laser research
institute. It has been wrecked by Yeltsin governments and the
huge building is virtually empty. This is the story of many
educational and research institutes and industrial plants. Their
highly skilled staffs have been sacked and scattered.

Officially, unemployment runs at 12 per cent but this varies
considerably from place to place and region to region. Moscow
remains something of an oasis of wealth and jobs compared to many
other cities and regions.

The Russian Federation is in the grip of an election campaign
with elections to the Duma (parliament) to take place on December
19. There is a great deal of manoeuvring and widespread cynicism
on the part of the people.

Presidential elections are scheduled for next June but there is
rumour upon rumour as the obviously very sick, incompetent
Yeltsin and his smaller and smaller group of supporters attempt
to create the circumstances by which to retain power for "The
Family" as his inner circle is called.

Failed

At the beginning of August the conservative forces attempted to
knock together a grouping led by some past Prime Ministers,
appointed and then rapidly sacked by Yeltsin. But this failed
although this is not likely to be the end of the matter.

Groups with vast wealth, American interests and the IMF will all
fight desperately to maintain their power and the impetus of so-
�called economic reforms.

Their aim remains the consolidation of a capitalist system and a
capitalist ruling class based on private enterprise.

Another grouping also came into existence in August led by
another former Prime Minister, Primakov and the popular Mayor of
Moscow, Yuri Luzhkov.

The program of this grouping called "Motherland -- all Russia" is
as yet unclear, but Primakov is regarded as one of the few
politicians who retains a reputation for honesty.

On the left is the Communist Party of the Russian Federation
(CPRF) and some other parties and groupings.

In August the CPRF published an appeal to Russian patriots under
a banner headline -- "Arise, Mighty Country" and ended with the
slogan -- "Our cause is just. Victory will be ours".

This recalls the slogans of the Great Patriotic War and the
titanic struggle which ended in the rout of the German Nazis in
1945.

Unfortunately the left also has its internal disunity and splits.

At a recent conference of the Agrarian Party which had formed a
bloc with the CPRF, the majority of the Agrarians opted to join
the Primakov/Luzhkov electoral group.

The minority (about one third) walked out, claiming that the
representation was rigged. The decision of the majority was
manipulated by a promise of money and was not in the interests of
the farmers of Russia, said the minority which will stick with
the left front.

Change

Some change has taken place in Russia's foreign policy. From a
position of slavishly following US policies, the Russian
Federation has steadily moved to a more independent position.

The US-NATO aggression against Yugoslavia may have been a major
turning point. There was an almost universal condemnation of this
war of aggression by the Russian people and it produced a wave of
anti-Western sentiment and a realisation that Russia itself could
be the next target of NATO's expansion to the east.

A major area of strategic contest, which relates to the American
drive for world domination, is Caucasian oil resources. For this
purpose the US and its NATO allies will stir up Islamic ethnic
claims and attempt to establish its bases on the Russian under-
belly in this area.

Countering these developments is the "strategic partnership"
�between China and Russia which has ended more than 30 years of
estrangement. The economic and political potential of a
friendship between Russia and China and other Asian countries has
enormous world significance.

A first step in the creation of a new unity of the former
Republics which made up the Soviet Union is the unity agreement
between the Russian Federation and Belarus.

This could be followed by others in time, especially if a left
government replaces those so far appointed by Yeltsin and
providing Yeltsin is, himself, relegated.

Immediately after Yeltsin's counter-revolutionary victory in
1990-91, there was a spate of name-changing and the destruction
of some historic monuments.

The main Moscow city street was changed from Gorky Street after
the famous Russian and Soviet writer. But this soon came to an
end and most place-names and many monuments remain.

The Karl Marx monument in Revolution Square was one of those that
survived as did the nearby plinth which quotes Lenin: "Marxism is
all powerful because it is true".

The Lenin Mausoleum also survived, although Yeltsin has more than
once threatened to "bury Lenin" and, he hoped, Lenin's life, work
and ideas.

I visited the city centre on a sunny Sunday afternoon on which
"Moscow Day" was being marked.

Red Square was closed but a part of the adjoining Revolution
Square was given over to a basketball competition per favour of
Adidas.

Very loud music was blaring forth from a stand which was almost
overshadowed by a huge bottle advertising Sprite. There were a
number of refreshment stalls sponsored by Nescafe.

McDonalds and Coca Cola are perhaps taking a backseat following
the widespread condemnation of the US-NATO aggression against
Yugoslavia.

Thousands of families were out walking, enjoying the greenery and
the warm day but this did not stop some young people staging a
large brawl brought under control by the 15,000 police on duty
for the occasion.

Karl Marx had his back to these goings on and the big business
sponsored games in Revolution Square. Lenin also sleeps on in the
Mausoleum awaiting the eventual new awakening and the socialist
restoration to come in the 21st century.






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