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- <text id=92TT1631>
- <title>
- July 20, 1992: Russia:The Party On Trial
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 20, 1992 Olympic Special
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 66
- The Party on Trial
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Yeltsin's democrats are asking a constitutional court to outlaw
- the Communist Party once and for all
- </p>
- <p>BY JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW
- </p>
- <p> The new tricolor flag of democratic Russia looked as if it
- had been hastily tacked to the courtroom wall underneath a
- metal emblem with the Soviet hammer and sickle. The 13 judges,
- seated at a nearby tribunal, did not appear to be completely
- comfortable in their new black robes with white linings. Minutes
- after the hearings opened, the court became embroiled in a
- free-for-all about how to deal with the fact that former
- President Mikhail Gorbachev had refused to show up. Show trials
- have always been a staple of Soviet political discourse, but the
- proceeding that began in Moscow last week is different. This
- time the Communist Party is in the dock, as Russians struggle
- to come to terms with seven decades of history. At issue is
- whether President Boris Yeltsin acted legally when he banned the
- party and seized its assets after last year's failed coup
- attempt. But the political stakes are higher. The trial will
- consider the high crimes and misdemeanors attributed to the
- party and perhaps outlaw, once and for all, the kind of
- totalitarian system it created.
- </p>
- <p> Amid moments of drama and confusion, Russia's
- Constitutional Court, established only last year, heard the
- first evidence in a case that was certain to test the mettle of
- the country's fledgling democracy and establish important legal
- precedents. The hearings raise issues about Yeltsin's power to
- rule by decree. They will expose the party's check ered past and
- pose painful questions about retribution and punishment in
- future trials. And they could provoke a surge of resentment
- among the party faithful that could spill into the streets --
- and heighten anxieties about another putsch attempt.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin won a major victory over hardliners in August
- 1991, but many democratic supporters fear that the second
- Russian revolution did not go far enough in suppressing the
- communist past and hope that the court will close out the
- chapter. In fact, what happened to the party remains something
- of a mystery. It controlled almost every aspect of life and
- counted more than 20 million members in its prime, yet seemed
- to vanish overnight after the failed coup. A year later, the
- legacy of communist rule has proved difficult to erase.
- Democrats may be in control of the tip of the pyramid of power,
- but the middle levels are still dominated by bureaucrats from
- the old nomenklatura, who may have taken down their portraits
- of Lenin but pay only lip service to the new regime. In a show
- of strength last month, a coalition of hard-line communists and
- extreme nationalists tried to occupy Moscow's main television
- studio. Now party members have gone to court to try to repeal
- Yeltsin's ban.
- </p>
- <p> The plaintiffs argue that Yeltsin overstepped his
- authority when he dissolved the party by decree and opened the
- way for a dictatorship in democratic disguise, where no
- political group will be safe from a presidential ban. They
- disclaim any responsibility for crimes committed by party
- leaders in the past and want to limit the scope of the hearings
- to the period after they renounced their monopoly on power in
- 1990. They also hope to shift the focus by dwelling on the
- party's achievements in defeating Nazi Germany and building the
- Soviet Union into a superpower.
- </p>
- <p> The democrats' defense hinges on the claim that the
- Communist Party was never just a political party but a
- totalitarian state structure ruled by an elite who pulled the
- strings of a puppet parliament, government and judicial system.
- The case will be based on a trail of paper evidence linking the
- party leadership to almost every decision of importance -- or
- unimportance -- made in the Soviet Union. Says presidential
- lawyer Sergei Shakhrai: "We will show how the Politburo passed
- laws, not the parliament; how it rendered judicial verdicts, not
- the Supreme Court; how it managed the economy and launched space
- flights, not government agencies. It was the Communist Party
- that created the Soviet Union and also brought about its
- downfall."
- </p>
- <p> As evidence, the lawyers have submitted 36 volumes of
- documents from the millions recorded by assiduous empire
- builders. Only a trickle have so far been leaked to the public,
- though the Russian government is now setting up guidelines for
- publication of more. But even these few offer revelations of
- party crimes and misdeeds on a massive scale: Communist
- campaigns to destroy the church, starve peasants in forced
- famines, purge political opponents and resettle entire ethnic
- groups. The financing of terrorists, who received arms shipments
- from Soviet warships on the high seas. The personal enrichment
- of party leaders. The sale of diamonds and gold abroad to buy
- food and consumer goods for wartorn Afghanistan at a time when
- there were chronic shortages at home. The squandering of hard
- currency on more than 70 communist movements around the globe.
- In one bizarre incident, the party funded training for Italian
- communists in radio codes and cosmetic surgery -- in case they
- had to go into hiding.
- </p>
- <p> The evidence is potentially so explosive that the
- hearings, which could last several weeks, have been compared in
- impact to the postwar Nuremberg trials of Germany's Nazi
- leaders. But Yeltsin's men say they have no desire to start a
- witch-hunt against specific party officials, including
- Gorbachev. "There are no victors and no vanquished," says
- Shakhrai. "People should be tried only for criminal actions, not
- because they were members of the party nomenklatura." Another
- team lawyer, Andrei Makarov, puts it more succinctly: "We do not
- want to turn these hearings into a political show."
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, the verdict will have enormous importance
- for the political future of a country that knows little about
- and has less faith in constitutional rights and legal
- procedings. The Yeltsin team wants to establish the crucial
- point that the President was actually defending the constitution
- when he dissolved the party. Says Makarov: "The court should
- create a precedent and state clearly that any organizations --
- fascist, communist or even superdemocratic -- should be subject
- to a ban when they try to realize their ideological goals
- through violence and violation of the law."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev has categorically refused to take part in the
- hearings, claiming that they will only produce "division and
- discord." Says he: "How can you put 70 years of history on
- trial?" Even those who blame Gorbachev for the party's ruin
- share his sentiments. Gennadi Zyuganov, a Russian communist
- leader who will be testifying against Yeltsin, does not believe
- that the party can get a fair hearing in a court made up of
- former communists. He warns that attempts to brand the party a
- "criminal organization" will be "the penultimate step to
- complete schism in society" and could push the country toward
- civil war.
- </p>
- <p> There is some irony in a court made up of former
- communists ruling on the legalities of a communist-written
- constitution in a case against the Communist Party. During its
- brief history, the court has already handed down rulings against
- Yeltsin. It is entirely possible that this time the judges may
- render a Solomonic verdict rebuking the Russian President for
- misusing his powers while upholding the notion that the party
- is unconstitutional.
- </p>
- <p> Still, members of the Yel tsin legal team remain confident
- of victory. They argue that if the court rules against the
- communists, it might prod fence straddlers in the bureaucracy,
- the police and the army to join in democratic change. Says
- Shakhrai: "If the court finally decides that the history of this
- organization is over, the President, the parliament and the
- people of Russia may be able to receive the kind of state power
- they need."
- </p>
- <p> The trouble is that Russians nowadays are more interested
- in the price of bread than in settling old scores. As Makarov
- concedes, "If you can't feed the country, all these discussions
- amount to nothing. Democracy cannot last long on an empty
- stomach." In the coming months, Russia's problem-plagued leaders
- might become so distracted in fending off the challenge from
- communist rabble-rousers out in the streets protesting the
- verdict that they might miss a danger nearer at hand: a creeping
- coup from within the state, as the gray mass of post-communist
- apparatchiks slowly regain control of the government and
- military bureaucracy. If supporters of the old regime lose this
- case, they could still win a victory out of court.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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