By Valery Dzutsev
The speaker of Tatarstan’s
parliament, Farid Mukhametshin, welcomed Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s
refusal to change the preamble of the Russian constitution to emphasize ethnic
Russians as the main ethnicity in the country. Observers, however, pointed out
that Tatarstan’s own constitution accentuates the Tatar people as opposed to the
“multinational people of Tatarstan” and still holds onto important articles,
albeit symbolic, that support Tatarstan’s aspirations for political autonomy
from Moscow,
such as notions of Tatarstan’s sovereignty and even separate citizenship (http://regnum.ru/news/polit/1520767.html, April 13).
In his 2012 election
campaign, Vladimir Putin yielded to the long-held Russian nationalist demand to
admit the ethnic Russians’ role as the “state-forming people” of Russia
(http://www.ng.ru/politics/2012-01-23/1_national.html, January 23). Putin, however, in the usual Soviet
tradition, did not want to designate his declaration into law. Just as in the
Soviet times, when the rules of politics were informally obeyed but rarely
specified in the laws, contemporary Russian leadership may share the Russian
nationalists’ views but tries to avoid specifying them in the legislation.
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