Sakha Omuk (1990) Explained

Sakha Omuk
Native Name:Саха Омук
Native Name Lang:sah
President:Mikhail Nikolayev
Foundation:June 1990
Dissolved:1994
Membership:5,000 (1991)[1]
Ideology:
Position:Big tent
National:Democratic Party of Russia
Country:the Soviet Union

Sakha Omuk (Yakut: Саха Омук|lit=[[Yakuts|Sakha people]]' or 'Sakha nation) was a political party active in the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and the Sakha Republic during the dissolution of the Soviet Union and early post-Soviet Russia. Ideologically supportive of Yakut autonomy and nationalism, it brought about the Yakut ASSR's declaration of sovereignty during the parade of sovereignties.

History

The founding congress of Sakha Omuk took place during June 1990.[2] The president of Sakha Omuk was, a popular theatre director and a member of the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union.[3] Sakha Omuk was named after a Yakut,[4] which had existed from 1920 to 1928.

Sakha Omuk's founding came during a period of growing national consciousness among Yakuts. The de jure autonomy of the Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic had been eroded by successive Soviet governments to the point where the region was de facto part of Russia.[5] Further, the arrival of thousands of Slavic labour migrants to work in Yakutia's mining industry had caused a massive demographic shift, with Yakuts dropping from 90% of the population in 1920 to 33.4% by 1989. 99% of the income from these industries was taken by the central Soviet government, leaving the regional population, particularly ethnic Yakut, in destitute living conditions. As a result of these factors, popular anger at the Soviet system reached a boiling point among Yakuts in the later half of the 1980s, with riots in the regional capital of Yakutsk in 1986.[6]

Sakha Omuk, working alongside fellow nationally minded groups Sakha Keskile and Kut-Sür, brought together intellectual voices in an effort to promote Yakut autonomy.[7] The party found early victories in electing reform-minded deputies to various legislatures, electing Mikhail Nikolayev[8] (de jure a member of the party,[7] though he later had strained relations with them[9]), and passing the Yakut declaration of sovereignty amidst the parade of sovereignties.[8]

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Sakha Omuk advocated for greater interconnectedness between the Yakut and the Turkic peoples within the Commonwealth of Independent States. On the other hand, the party, particularly members of the radical wing led by the party's vice-president Vladimir Nikolayev resisted Slavic labour migration, seeking to deny citizenship to temporary workers and promote the voluntary emigration of non-Yakut.[1] In April 1992, the party protested against President Nikolayev, calling on him to pass the constitution, which proclaimed Yakutia as sovereign and having the right to self-determination.[10]

Even after President Nikolayev began to distance himself from Sakha Omuk, the party continued to retain significant stature within the government, and despite its self-proclaimed status as "constructive opposition", its members held multiple ministries. It was also closely connected to the Democratic Party of Russia.[11]

Sakha Omuk managed only a minor showing in the 1993 election to the State Assembly of the Sakha Republic, owing to waning popularity and many Yakuts' distrust for political parties after the Soviet period. The party ultimately dissolved in 1994, and its members continued to focus on strengthening Yakut influence in the region, particularly in the Assembly.[8]

References

  1. Web site: Khazanov . Anatoly . Anatoly Khazanov . 3 December 1992 . Current Situation in Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . . 7.
  2. Grigoryev . Stepan . 2017 . Национально-культурные объединения Якутии в общественно-политической истории региона конца XX - начала XXI веков . The national and cultural associations of Yakutia in the socio-political history of the region during the end of the 20th and early 21st centuries . Scientific Dialogue . ru . 12 . 300 . Cyberleninka.
  3. Web site: Борисов Андрей Саввич . Borisov, Andrey Savvich . 6 April 2024 . SakhaNews . ru.
  4. Web site: Khazanov . Anatoly . Anatoly Khazanov . 3 December 1992 . Current Situation in Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . . 5–6.
  5. Grigoryev . Stepan . 2017 . Национально-культурные объединения Якутии в общественно-политической истории региона конца XX - начала XXI веков . The national and cultural associations of Yakutia in the socio-political history of the region during the end of the 20th and early 21st centuries . Scientific Dialogue . ru . 12 . 298–299 . Cyberleninka.
  6. Web site: Khazanov . Anatoly . Anatoly Khazanov . 3 December 1992 . Current Situation in Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . . 1–3.
  7. Ibos . Caroline . January–June 1990 . Un exemple de bricolage identitaire dans l'espace post-soviétique : la république autonome de Yakoutie-Sakha . An example of identity-building in the post-Soviet space: the autonomous republic of Yakutia-Sakha . CEMOTI . fr . 27 . 290 . Persée.
  8. Balzer . Marjorie Mandelstam . Vinokurova . Uliana . January 1996 . Nationalism, Interethnic Relations and Federalism: The Case of the Sakha Republic . . 48 . 1 . 105–106 . JSTOR.
  9. Web site: Khazanov . Anatoly . Anatoly Khazanov . 3 December 1992 . Current Situation in Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . . 8.
  10. Web site: Khazanov . Anatoly . Anatoly Khazanov . 3 December 1992 . Current Situation in Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . . 8.
  11. Web site: Muzayev . Timur . 1999 . Этнический сепаратизм в России . Ethnic Separatism in Russia . 6 April 2024 . . 323 . ru.
  12. News: Argunov . Ayaal . 20 December 2021 . Рубрика "Кадр". В этот день 30 лет назад Михаил Николаев был избран президентом Якутии . Photo Report: On this day 30 years ago, Mikhail Nikolayev was elected President of Yakutia . 6 April 2024 . Yasia . ru.