Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 25 – Moscow has
already imposed restrictions on Russian security service personnel from
travelling abroad, but now interior officials in Kaliningrad are “overfulfilling
the plan” and restricting the ability of police and procuracy officials in
Kaliningrad from travelling to other parts of the Russian Federation unless
they can accord to fly.
According to
yesterday’s “Novyye izvestiya,” such personnel will not be allowed to travel by
ground from the exclave to the rest of Russia because to do so they would have
to cross the territory of Lithuania. Given that many of them cannot afford to
fly, that measure keeps them from traveling at all (newizv.ru/politics/2014-06-24/203667-nevezdnye-v-svoju-stranu.html).
Such
restrictions, of course, are a clear violation of the 1993 Constitution. And
not surprisingly, many are angry, something that could degrade unit cohesion. The wife of one Kaliningrad policemen
speaking on condition of anonymity complained that she and her husband couldn’t
afford to fly and would thus be kept from visiting even Russian resorts.
Vitaly Slovetsky, a “Novyye
izvestiya” journalist, says that siloviki commanders around the country are
confiscating international passports so that their subordinates cannot travel
abroad, but no other region has gone as far as Kaliningrad. Interior Ministry officials downplay this,
saying only that they do not recommend foreign travel at this time and are
doing so to protect the “security” of their employees.
Svetlana Postavnichaya, a press
officer for the interior ministry office in Kaliningrad, told Slovetsky that it
is true that police are “not recommended to travel to other states” but that “no
one has prohibited trips” from Kaliningrad to Russia proper. What has happened,
she said, is that commanders are asking their subordinates to provide “more
detailed” itineraries in such cases.
“What this is connected with,” she
continued, “we do not know.” Elsewhere in Russia, she said, the same
requirement is being imposed.
Former Russian Procurator General
Yuri Skuratov suggested that what is happening in Kaliningrad is typical of a
longstanding Russian pattern. Moscow gives an order and then local officials “over-fulfill
the plan” in order to protect themselves from charges that they haven’t carried
out their orders.
Aleksandr Gurov, a retired MVD
lieutenant general, agreed. He said that any effort to restrict siloviki from
moving about the country would be a violation of the Constitution but
acknowledged that “certain police chiefs” may not be aware of that and are thus
tightening things beyond what is required.
Officials at the Kaliningrad
procuracy refused to discuss the matter, Slovetsky said, and press officers at
the Russian Procuracy General responded that they “did not have information
about such a ban.”
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