Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 11 – The
enormous number of weapons in the Donbas as a result of the actions of
pro-Moscow forces in that Ukraine region are already casting a shadow on the
rest of Ukraine, something Vladimir Putin probably welcomes, as well as on
adjoining areas of the Russian Federation, something he certainly does not.
Today, Kyiv’s “Segodnya” newspaper
reports that “Ukraine is filling up with illegal weapons from the zone of
military actions” both because individuals bring in weapons for their personal
use or because of organized contraband networks (segodnya.ua/ukraine/nelegalnoe-oruzhie-iz-donbassa-pochemu-iz-za-nego-gibnut-lyudi-i-kak-s-etim-borotsya-648198.html).
This influx of weapons not only
makes possible the political use of weapons such as the grenade tossed in front
of the Verkhovna Rada on August 31 but also allows for the spread of
increasingly violent crime and numerous weapons-related accidents across the
entire country, the paper continues.
The paper offers numerous examples
and then suggests that the authorities must improve the monitoring of weapons
in the Donbas, control any that are taken out, and increase penalties for those
who illegally bring in or keep weapons.
Dmitry Tymchuk, a military experts
and Verkhovna Rada deputy, says that are present “no one can say precisely how
many weapons are already on the territory of Ukraine.” But it is clear that the
largest source of them comes from contraband networks rather than from the
decisions of individuals to take guns or grenades home with them.
Officials have to do more to track
how weapons found got into the country, he argues, and he also suggests that
the situation could be improved if Kyiv adopted a law legalizing the possession
of guns for self-defense but requiring that all such weapons be registered with
the police.
Vladimir Fesenko, a Ukrainian
political scientist, disagrees. Adopting such a law would make the situation
worse, increasing the number of gunds and leading to a rise in violent crime.
If more people have more guns, they will certainly use them, he argues. Thus
adopting such a law would be “a most enormous mistake.”
He urges tighter control at the borders
of the combat zone and also the establishment of a “buy back” program in which
the government would pay people who would agree to turn over the weapons in
their possession voluntarily.”
Meanwhile, illegal weapons are
flowing into the Russian Federation. (For background, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/09/returning-donbas-veterans-bringing-war.html.)
In today’s “Yezhednevny zhurnal,” commentator Dmitry Oreshkin suggests it poses
a serious problem for the Russian authorities (ej.ru/?a=note&id=28580).
As a result of this influx of guns,
the political analyst says, “the Kremlin is now encountering an obvious
problem: people accustomed to living for a year and a half under conditions of
complete illegality to solving their problems with the help of guns are leaving
Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts” are bringing their weapons and their values with
them.
Now that Putin is wrapping up his
adventure there, Oreshkin says, these people have no future or any willingness
to return to a peaceful life. As a result, there is “an obvioius threat of the
growth of banditism and an obvious problem for the FSB: how is it to struggle
with these militants who were thrown into the Donbas when they come here?”
Almost certainly, he continues, the
FSB and the Russian police will deal with such people “decisively” just as they
did after the Afghan war. The FSB will say: “we didn’t send you there, and that
means we don’t owe you anything. Go and live in a camp for refugees but don’t
steal” or the consequences will be extremely severe.
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