Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 14 – Given all the
changes Vladimir Putin is making in these days in the Russian constitutional
order, ones that legalize the presidentialist dictatorship he has already
created, many may have failed to notice that a law he signed restoring a key
feature of the GULAG, the use of convicts as slave laborers, went into effect
on January 1.
And while some may be inclined to
dismiss this as nothing more than the nearly universal practice of using
prisoners to produce things like license plates and road signs as in the United
States, it is already taking shape as something worse and more ominous with
Russian businessmen calling for setting up forced labor camps in parts of the
country.
The law discussed, passed and signed
by Putin last year calls for creating two kinds of labor camps: entire colonies
where inmates will be put to work either for the state or for businesses on a
contract basis and special “correction centers” attached to business sites (censoru.net/2020/01/14/putin-vozvraschaet-gulag-s-1-janvarja-uzakonen-rabskij-trud-zakljuchennyh.html).
As the editors of Censoru.net
point out, “comparisons with the GULAG are no accident: in Soviet times, those
who landed behind bars were put in a position equivalent to slavery, with the loss
of all human rights and facing an extremely high probability of rapid death.”
Now, there is a great danger that Putin’s move will have similar consequences.
What makes this possibility so
distressing, the portal continues, is that “in present-day Russia, just as in
Stalinist times, many inmates are serving sentence not so much for real crimes as
for poorly concealed dissent.” The total numbers of both real criminals and
political prisoners are in the thousands or even more.
Worse, this new arrangement will
give the Russian powers that be an additional incentive to put people behind
bars whether they deserve it or not.
Already since the law went into
force, businesses and officials are calling on the federal penal system to
create “industrial clusters” very much like “labor camps” where inmates are to
be held and put to work as a cheap labor force, Finanz.ru reports (finanz.ru/novosti/aktsii/v-sibiri-predlozhili-vozrodit-trudovye-lagerya-1028821280).
Several corporations have made quite
specific suggestions as to how many prisoners they would like to use as workers, arguing that both business and society will benefit, the
former by keeping costs down and the latter by having the convicts “re-socialized”
by active labor (kommersant.ru/doc/4220120).
According to reports, the Russian
prison authorities view such proposals in a positive light; but rights
activists are anything but happy. They note that such use of prison labor is
how the GULAG arose in the Soviet Union in the 1920s, and they point out that
most prison workers are low skilled and that the system is anything but
economically efficient.
But of course, the real purpose of
the GULAG in the past and likely of its recrudescence now is not efficiency but
rather the use of slave labor for tasks the state could not otherwise afford
and the spread of fear of the authorities throughout the population to allow
the dictatorship to act as it wants.
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