Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 13 – Russian militiamen
and now police have never been noted for their politeness in dealing with
Russian citizens, but those who have served in the North Caucasus as many now
have are significantly more nasty and brutal to their compatriots than those
who have not, according to Radio Liberty’s Yuliya Suguyeva.
In an article today, she notes that
the experiences that Russian policemen have in the North Caucasus incline them
to be more brutal and more corrupt than their colleagues who are not sent
there, yet another form of blowback from Moscow’s continuing war in the region
(kavkazr.com/a/posle-kavkaza-politseiskie-stanovyatsya-zlee/28483768.html).
Russian policemen continue to be
sent to the North Caucasus to help with what Moscow styles its “counter-terrorism
effort.” This week alone, police from Ivanovo, Penza, Kostroma and Amur
oblasts, Primorsky kray, and the republics of Buryatia and Tyva were dispatched
there for “lengthy tours of duty.”
One Chechen lawyer, speaking
anonymously, said that he didn’t understand why Moscow continues to send
Russian police to the North Caucasus and can only assume that it is part of the
way, along with massive subsidies, that the center seeks to secure the loyalty
of regional officials.
Many local people are pleased to see
the Russian police come, Suguyeva reports, because they behave much better than
do their local counterparts. But while
that may be true, so too is something else: at least some and possibly many of
the Russian police pick up the habits of the locals and when they return, they
behave much worse than they did before.
There is no question that the
situation in the North Caucasus is less violent than it was 10 to 15 years ago,
but human rights groups like Memorial say that the Russian siloviki “instead of
shifting to the use of softer methods of ‘work’ with risk groups are to the
contrary returning to harsh methods of the 1990s and early 2000s” (kavkazr.com/a/stabilizatsiaya-bez-spokoistviya/28483121.html).
They are
doing so, Memorial suggests, even though such actions radicalize the local
population. But if the phenomenon Suguyeva points to is widespread, they may
end not only with more terrorist attacks in Russian cities but also lead to the
radicalization of Russians against the powers that be across the country.
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