Kremlin mobilizing youth

Published March 21, 2005

MOSCOW: It was about halfway through the secret training session of the new pro-Kremlin youth movement, Nashi, when Ilya Yashin was exposed as an infiltrator.

Yashin, 21, leader of the opposition Youth Yabloko group, and an undercover journalist had posed as delegates to get into the clandestine meeting near Moscow.

Without warning, the pair were pounced on by an organizer who dragged them to the front of the hall. “These are the ones we have to fight against,” he told an angry crowd of 200 Nashi supporters. Five security guards seized Yashin, took him outside and pitched him into a snowdrift.

“I think what happened to me was the start of something,” says Yashin, a slender politics student whose unceremonious ejection from the training session made headlines across Russia.

As President Vladimir Putin’s poll ratings have dived after the introduction of unpopular welfare reforms, battle lines are being drawn in a new struggle to mobilize young people, both for and against the Kremlin.

Youth movements are springing up. In the past two months a clutch of youth protest groups opposing Putin have been organized. One is “Walking Without Putin”, a skit on the well-established pro-Kremlin movement, Walking Together. Another is a chapter of the militant opposition group, Pora, which played a key role last year in neighbouring Ukraine’s “orange revolution”.

Kremlin has scrambled its forces to set up Nashi, a shadowy youth group. Its pugnacious leader, Vassily Yakemenko, 33, said that its enemies would be those who saw Russia as ‘a feeding trough for the global economy”.

In a sign of rising tension, Nashi has been accused of two violent attacks on the headquarters of an opposition party.

Yakemenko claims Nashi is a patriotic movement that is dedicated to anti-fascism.

Publicly Yakemenko has denied any Kremlin links, but during a secretly recorded speech to would-be members last month he claimed: “The President knows such an organization is being formed... You’ll be given millions of dollars to do it!”

Yakemenko’s brother Boris, a small, bearded man who is chief ideologue of the pro-Putin Walking Together, said meeting the threat of a Russian orange revolution was a paramount task. “One of the main aims of Nashi is to prevent a Ukraine scenario in 2008 when the President’s term ends,” he said.

Although the Kremlin has denied all links with the group, few Russians doubt it is the brainchild of Vladislav Surkov, Putin’s sly deputy chief of staff. In a rare interview late last year, Surkov spoke of the need to mobilize social organizations against a growing coalition of “false liberals and real fascists” sponsored from abroad.

One veteran radical group claims it has already fallen prey to thugs from Nashi. The National Bolsheviks —famous for lobbing mayonnaise at politicians and occupying the Health Ministry — say their headquarters was attacked twice this month.

To reach their bunker beneath a suburban apartment block in southern Moscow you must pass two steel doors and elaborate security checks.

“About 40 guys from Nashi came here and forced their way in,” said the “NatsBoly” deputy leader, Vladimir Abel, as he led me through a warren of dank underground chambers. One man was badly beaten, he said.

What happens next, say analysts, depends on how rapidly the opposing groups can recruit members. So far, the Kremlin camp is ahead but Putin has taken a knock in popularity after countrywide protests over his controversial social reforms.—Dawn/The Guardian News Service.