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- <text id=89TT1595>
- <link 89TT3380>
- <title>
- June 19, 1989: Hard Lessons And Unhappy Citizens
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 19, 1989 Revolt Against Communism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COMMUNISM, Page 28
- SOVIET UNION
- Hard Lessons and Unhappy Citizens
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Wherever he turns, Gorbachev faces the forces he has unleashed
- </p>
- <p>By William R. Doerner
- </p>
- <p> Not so long ago, the catalog of crises that have recently
- afflicted the Soviet Union would have been buried in the
- recesses of the Kremlin, with much of the rest of the world none
- the wiser. Not anymore. With a newly emboldened press and
- oratorical skirmishing going on constantly in Moscow's new
- Congress of People's Deputies, an engrossed world knows
- practically everything.
- </p>
- <p> The very act of revelation is a central feature in the
- gradual loosening of Communist strictures that Mikhail Gorbachev
- is bringing to the Soviet Union, as he grapples with the
- challenge of revamping the system without completely violating
- it -- and a stark contrast to the refusal of China's leadership
- to countenance the slightest openness.
- </p>
- <p> Paying heed to the cataclysmic outcome of that refusal, the
- Kremlin calibrated its response with great care. Early in the
- week, the Congress issued a timid resolution urging that
- "wisdom, sound reason and a balanced approach" prevail in China.
- Later, caution became less evident. "We hadn't expected this,"
- said Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennadi Gerasimov, adding that
- his government was "extremely dismayed" over the events in
- China. But Moscow's options were limited. After almost two
- decades of exchanging ideological insults, the Chinese were
- scarcely prepared to accept a lecture from the Soviets. In any
- case, admonitions would only feed lingering Chinese suspicions
- that the Kremlin still harbors hopes of playing schoolmaster to
- the Communist movement. So what is left, in Moscow's view, is
- nothing but time and patience. "If you think we don't understand
- the situation, you are wrong," said a frustrated Soviet observer
- last week. "Not one Soviet, from the President on down to a
- schoolchild, approves of China's use of tanks to repress the
- students. But the only way we can really help is by example,
- through deepening democracy in our own country."
- </p>
- <p> Last week the world was able to watch that process lurch
- ahead as debates in the Soviet Congress reached a painful peak
- of bitterness. Little was hidden from the Soviet people as a
- pair of new disasters threw the nation into mourning.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's experiment in rambunctious parliamentary
- democracy adjourned, with moments of high drama to the very end.
- At the closing session of the Congress, Andrei Sakharov and
- Gorbachev squared off against each other. Sakharov called for
- removal of the constitutional provision giving the Communist
- Party the "leading role" in Soviet political life, while the
- Soviet leader accused the Nobel Peace laureate of trying to
- "belittle" the new parliament's achievements. There were also
- painful disclosures about the dreadful state of the Soviet
- economy. Prime Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov admitted that some 40
- million Soviets, or 13% of the population, live below the
- poverty level, that the Afghanistan war had cost about $70
- billion and that the country's foreign-trade deficit this year
- will reach $52 billion. (The U.S. foreign-trade deficit last
- year was $119.8 billion.) In an attack on the economic front,
- Ryzhkov proposed cuts of almost a third in the military budget
- until 1995 and the elimination of as many as 18 of the 50
- government ministries.
- </p>
- <p> The political challenges that confronted Gorbachev included
- the first walkout of the session, staged by members from
- Lithuania, one of the country's three Baltic republics and a
- hotbed of nationalism. They were provoked by a plan, backed by
- Gorbachev, to establish a commission empowered to have the final
- say on constitutional disputes. Baltic deputies viewed the
- proposal as one more way for Moscow to impose its will on the
- 14 non-Russian republics. "Our electors ordered us to take care
- of the sovereignty of our republics," declared Romas Gudaitis,
- a writer and deputy from Lithuania. Gorbachev was clearly
- exasperated by the Lithuanians' sudden departure, calling after
- them, "I ask you to be calm because this is not so simple." In
- the end, Gorbachev won passage of a compromise measure, placing
- the commission's charter in the hands of a group that includes
- leading dissidents.
- </p>
- <p> But that minor eruption paled next to the outburst of
- violence in Uzbekistan, the fourth largest republic, located in
- the southern part of the U.S.S.R. The worst outbreak of ethnic
- mayhem in the modern Soviet era began on the night of June 3,
- in the city of Fergana (pop. 190,000), 150 miles southeast of
- Tashkent, as bands of native Uzbeks staged a series of brutal
- attacks on minority Meskhetian Turks, who were deported from
- Georgia in 1944 by Joseph Stalin. Most of the 190,000 displaced
- Meskhetians settled in Uzbekistan, a region that did not always
- welcome their presence.
- </p>
- <p> Precisely what touched off the violence remained unclear,
- despite thorough glasnost-era reporting by the Soviet press and
- television. Some stories said the fighting was touched off by
- a dispute over the price of strawberries at a local market,
- while others maintained that the attacks were in retaliation for
- a fight last month in the tiny market town of Kuvasi.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the cause, mobs of mostly young Uzbek men went on
- a rampage against the Meskhetians, hunting them down in their
- homes and beating them with iron bars and stones. Moscow rushed
- 9,000 Interior Ministry troops to the scene in an attempt to
- quell the violence. But fighting erupted in the city of Kokand,
- 40 miles west of Fergana, where a mob numbering 5,000, some with
- automatic weapons, attacked government buildings, blocked
- railroad tracks and set fires.
- </p>
- <p> By week's end at least 80 people, mostly Meskhetians, had
- been killed and perhaps as many as 1,000 injured. In addition,
- more than 400 homes, eight factories and six schools had been
- burned down. Some 11,000 Meskhetians had taken up residence in
- refugee camps, either because their homes had been destroyed or
- because they feared for their lives.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev acknowledged the violence in sessions of the
- Congress, the latest outbursts in a growing litany that many
- conservatives blame on his tolerant governing style. Said the
- Soviet leader: "Let us again issue an appeal to keep the peace.
- Please stop and let us trust the legal organs of the country to
- do everything to protect the lives of the people."
- </p>
- <p> Ethnic disorders were not the only sad news that Gorbachev
- conveyed to the Congress last week. On Monday, dressed in a
- funereal black suit, the Soviet leader called for a moment of
- silence in memory of "several hundred" Soviets who perished
- over the weekend in a gas-pipeline explosion in the southern
- Ural mountains. Some three hours before the explosion,
- technicians apparently noticed a dip in pressure along one
- section of the pipeline. But instead of searching for a leak,
- they turned up the gas flow to get the pressure back to normal,
- allowing huge quantities of propane, butane and other highly
- flammable gasses to escape and form an atmospheric "lake."
- Fatefully, two passenger trains on the famed TransSiberian
- Railway were passing each other when the gases, ignited probably
- by a spark or a discarded cigarette, detonated with the force
- of a ten-kiloton bomb (the atomic bomb used on Hiroshima was
- 12.5 kilotons).
- </p>
- <p> It was the worst train disaster in Soviet history. The
- explosion thrust a pillar of fire into the nighttime Siberian
- skies that was visible to observers more than 60 miles away. The
- bodies of 137 of the 1,200 passengers aboard the trains were
- recovered, 53 more died en route to the hospital and an unknown
- number were completely incinerated in the blast, making a
- precise toll impossible. More than 700 passengers and crew, many
- of them horribly burned, required hospitalization. The victims
- included many children on their way to summer camps on the Black
- Sea. On Saturday a train traveling from that resort area crashed
- into a bus, killing 31 people and injuring at least 14 others.
- </p>
- <p> Ealier in the week, Gorbachev had visited the scene of the
- explosion, acre after acre of which was scorched black by fire.
- "It seems once again that it is a matter of incompetence,
- irresponsibility, mismanagement," the grim and angry President
- told the Congress. "It was nothing less than a shameful outrage.
- There will be no progress in this country if we have such
- laxness." Gorbachev then exhorted his listeners to "learn hard
- lessons from what happened." Last week in the Soviet Union,
- there was no shortage of hard lessons.
- </p>
- <p>--Paul Hofheinz and John Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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