Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 28 – Over the past
year, Russian siloviki have dramatically increased the number of Muslims they
have arrested and incarcerated; and as a result, the Russian penal system now
faces a problem it doesn’t yet know how to solve: the rise of tightly organized
Islamist jamaats which increasingly are spreading their views to other
prisoners.
According to the Russian penal
authorities, “Kommersant” reports today, there are 61 mosques, more than 230
prayer rooms and “more than 950” “’official’” Muslim communities in prisons and
the camps, which officials say unite “about 9,000 Muslims.” But the real
numbers are certainly higher because many Muslims prefer not to register (kommersant.ru/doc/2901612).
There have been jamaats and even
radical ones in Russian penal institutions for some time, the paper continues;
but they have become vastly more numerous over the last 15 years as the number
of Muslim prisoners has increased and the level of radicalism among them has grown,
according to Denis Sokolov, a specialist on the North Caucasus.
Such groups create problems for the
special services, he says, because it is always easier to control prisoners who
aren’t so organized and who can be bossed about by ordinary criminals. Now, he continues, Islam has become so
widespread and so powerful that prisoners speak of “a green zone” run by
Muslims alongside a “black” one run by ordinary criminals.
Turning to religion often happens
among prisoners, Sokolov says, not only because it helps them get through the
experience of jail but also because it provides “both physical defense and
defense against denigrating customs.”
That in and of itself is often a good thing; the problem arises when
these groups turn to extremism.
The self-isolation of Muslim
prisoners has begun to make both other prisoners and the law enforcement
agencies “nervous,” “Kommersant says.
And that in turn makes some of what the prison authorities say about
Islam suspect because they are inclined to exaggerate the problem in order to
win support and gain resources.
Moreover, the paper continues, it
remains unknown how many ISIS supporters have in fact passed through Russian
prisons and what the real attitude of the authorities is to them. Sokolov says that “the special services
prefer not to stop the recruitment so that they can have an network of agents.”
But because they do and because the
numbers of Muslim prisoners are now so large, the prison authorities “risk” in
Sokolov’s words “losing control over the prisons.”
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