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- <text id=91TT2024>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: Bread, Cigarettes and Reform
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- SOVIET UNION
- Bread, Cigarettes and Reform
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The revolution spreads from Moscow to the Urals, but can democrats
- consolidate their power in the provinces?
- </p>
- <p>By John Kohan/Perm
- </p>
- <p> An excited murmur ripples along the ragged line of
- shoppers, snaking away from the tiny tobacco shop on Lenin
- Street. It is 10 a.m. on an overcast day in the provincial city
- of Perm. Many in the crowd, pressed against the closed
- plate-glass doors, have been waiting more than four hours just
- for this moment. A flatbed truck pulls up with a precious cargo
- of cigarettes. As two men begin unloading, the impatient
- shoppers surge forward. There is a resounding whack. A young
- policeman, standing in the truck, hits his billy club against
- the wooden side panel in warning. "He probably would like to
- bash a few heads," mutters a middle-aged woman watching
- resignedly from the sidewalk. "What torture they put us
- through!"
- </p>
- <p> Although supplies are erratic, cigarettes and bread are
- practically the only major staples not rationed these days in
- this industrial center of 1.1 million, situated 700 miles
- northeast of Moscow on the Trans-Siberian railway line through
- the Ural Mountains. Salt, sugar, butter, eggs, macaroni and even
- matches must be bought with ration coupons--assuming, of
- course, that state-run stores have the items. At harvest time,
- a shortage of sugar caused a near panic; without it, fruits and
- berries from family garden plots could not be made into
- preserves for the coming winter. In Perm, as elsewhere in
- provincial Russia, food and tobacco rate higher on the day's
- agenda than revolution. Young couples continue to lay wedding
- bouquets at the Lenin monument instead of daubing it with
- anticommunist slogans.
- </p>
- <p> And yet the revolution has unquestionably come to town.
- When local officials met on the second day of the attempted
- coup to decide their response, some 5,000 demonstrators
- gathered outside in support of Boris Yeltsin. The timely show
- of "people power" helped tip the balance, and now the Russian
- tricolor flutters proudly atop the closed offices of the Perm
- regional soviet and the city council. Two empty plywood panels
- are all that identify the former Communist Party headquarters.
- But if Russian democrats hope to consolidate the victory they
- won over hard-liners at the barricades of Moscow, they will have
- to do more than hoist flags and close down provincial outposts
- of the Communist Party apparat. They must begin filling empty
- store shelves, building more apartment blocks, cleaning up
- pollution and saving military factories from turning into
- rust-belt relics--in effect, they must correct the economic
- and industrial carnage of seven decades of Communist rule before
- the people's patience runs out.
- </p>
- <p> Perm's reformers worry, however, that local governments,
- still dominated by communist apparatchiks, may yet stifle the
- revolution in the provinces. The only thing that distinguishes
- the Perm regional soviet from Moscow's discredited national
- parliament, they joke, is that in Perm there are no electronic
- voting machines. Radical reformers, in fact, want Yeltsin to
- expand presidential control over regional executive bodies and
- appoint his own administrative representative in Perm to see
- that reforms are carried out. Contends local political columnist
- Vladimir Vinichenko: "We must use some authoritarian methods to
- ensure the victory of democracy."
- </p>
- <p> A key issue for reformers is the future of the local
- industry. More than 75% of the region's output is defense
- related, but nowadays local factories actively seek Western
- investors. Small firms like Permavia, a semiprivate stock
- company designing aircraft engines, show it is possible to spin
- off commercial ventures from traditional defense plants. But the
- prospects look bleak for salvaging "heavy metal" armaments
- manufacturers like Perm's Lenin works, once a key supplier of
- artillery to Iraq's Saddam Hussein. There is a real danger that
- social discontent among defense-industry employees, an elite
- among Soviet workers, will be used to foment opposition to the
- Yeltsin reforms.
- </p>
- <p> No one can replenish the market or revitalize aging
- industries overnight, but the reformers can expand existing
- pockets of progress. A new Perm commodity exchange, employing
- 500 "brokers," is already taking over from the state-controlled
- distribution system, bringing together traders in chemicals,
- wood products and construction materials for regular auctions.
- Andrei Kuzyayev, the 26-year-old economic whiz kid who runs the
- exchange, says the present period of transition to a free
- economy reminds him of sand sifting through an hourglass. The
- time will soon come, he argues, when the narrow neck will have
- to be widened.
- </p>
- <p> He has a point. The success of the Russian revolution in
- Perm--and elsewhere--will ultimately depend on dismantling
- state controls, not substituting new ones for old ones. As
- Grigori Volchek, a local economic analyst, succinctly puts it,
- "People believe that Yeltsin can solve the food problem, build
- more housing and modernize factories. All Yeltsin can do is
- give us our freedom. We must do the rest ourselves."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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