Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 11 – Not only high
profile political crimes remain unresolved in Russia, experts say. At least
half of all crimes are not solved, and the figure may be even worse because
over the last several years, the Russian interior ministry and other agencies
have stopped initiating criminal investigations or publishing data on real
crimes.
“Staffers of law enforcement organs,”
Elena Mishina of “Novaya versiya” writes, “don’t hide what is going on: they open
criminal cases unwillingly lest the statistics make them look bad. And some of
them joke darkly that ‘the ministry of internal affairs has been transformed
into the ministry of positive statistics” (versia.ru/pochemu-kazhdoe-vtoroe-prestuplenie-v-rf-ostayotsya-neraskrytym).
The approach of Russian police and
prosecutors to crimes is very different from that of their counterparts abroad,
the journalist says. In other countries, police open a criminal case when there
are reports of a crime. If those reports don’t prove to be true, the police
then close the case.
But in Russia, the police don’t open
a case until they have collected enormous amounts of information; and often
this process is so extended that no charges are brought at all, Mishina
suggests.
According to Russian law enforcement
specialists, the situation has been deteriorating in Russia since the 2011
reforms of the militia. Many experienced
investigators lost their jobs and the rate of solving crimes dropped in the
course of that year alone by six percent. Since then, they say, the situation
has only gotten worse.
Mishina notes that “a particular
role in the degradation of the agency has been played by the rise of clans within
the current system of the interior ministry,” a pattern that “was not true in
the USSR or even in the 1990s.” Regional political leaders install their own
people in the interior ministry agencies, and the latter know not to do
anything to make their bosses look bad.
Many experts hope, she says, that
the reconstitution of the interior ministry now being carried about will change
things for the better, but both the FMS and the counter-narcotics police agency
have been so unprofessional and even incompetent that more than bureaucratic
changes will be needed to solve crimes in these areas.
And there is a very real fear that
the latest reform will end with dismissals, unmaskings and reports of progress
but lead nowhere. That is because “the police command again is beginning to
demand positive statistics … at any price,” including falsifications and the
refusal even to register crimes, let alone solve them.
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