Is there a connection between the political regime in a country and the number of catastrophes and natural disasters that befall it?
This might sound like the basis of a science fiction novel, but statistics in Russia show that truth is sometimes stranger than fiction. There have been more natural and man-made catastrophes in Russia under President Vladimir Putin than at any time since the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1987. These include the sinking of the Kursk submarine, the accident at the Sayano-Shushensky dam in 2009, peat and forest fires in the summer of 2010 and, most recently, the flooding in the Krasnodar region.
Of course, the flood that wiped out much of Krymsk on July 7 was not comparable to Chernobyl in either scale or cause. But there are many similarities, particularly in how the authorities responded to the disaster and its consequences. Like in Chernobyl, the authorities didn't inform residents about the danger in time. Krasnodar Governor Alexander Tkachyov
Oddly enough, the region's leaders still think they did their best. Tkachyov's explanation for the emergency services' inaction was both extraordinarily naive and more than a little heartless: "Do you think that from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. we could have gone around to every house? That's impossible. First of all, with what resources? And second, would you have gotten up and left your home?"
Also like in Chernobyl, the number of victims in Krymsk is still unknown. There is the official statistic of 171 people, but that is disputed by countless witnesses. During a meeting of flood victims and authorities in Krymsk on July 17, four people who accused city leaders of underreporting the number of deaths
The authorities' actions in the Krymsk clean-up operation were also reminiscent of the chaotic and ineffective efforts during the Chernobyl accident. The Emergency Situations Ministry only repaired the infrastructure, and residents were left to their own devices. The situation changed only after the so-called "Committee of Public Oversight" was created on Putin's personal order on July 15. Ten days after the flooding, soldiers were finally sent to help the residents.
But even that didn't begin to solve the problems. A volunteer wrote on Facebook: "Despite their enormous resources, the regional administration and the Emergency Situations Ministry still haven't mapped out the city to show all the damaged houses and destruction. We find streets and houses that need weeks of work."
Instead of funneling all their resources and energy into the job at hand, the local administration has used them to fight the hundreds of volunteers who have come to Krymsk from all over the country. The administration moved the volunteers' tent camp beyond the city limits and has officially declared that the city doesn't need any more aid, human or material. Vasily Krutko, the former mayor of Krymsk,
Other sources of "chaos," he said, are the "destructive powers of the mass media, which are using techniques that aren't quite civilized." In fact, a local television station was threatened with the loss of its broadcast license. Several social media groups created to help flood victims were blocked, included on Vkontakte, a network popular in the regions.
In this situation, it's no wonder that for many people the lesson taught by Krymsk is what journalist Arkady Babchenko
After the accident at Chernobyl, many citizens of the Soviet Union came to the same conclusion. Five years later, the Soviet Union ceased to exist.
Perhaps the connection between politics and catastrophes exists outside the pages of science fiction after all.
Victor Davidoff is a Moscow-based writer and journalist whose blog is
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