Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – The increase in
the number of coronavirus cases in Ingushetia, already the highest in per
capita terms in the North Caucasus apparently has been paralleled by a rise in
the number of Ingush who refuse to live according to the isolation regime and
thus force the police to ticket them.
These developments have prompted Mikhail
Korobkin, republic minister for internal affairs, to issue an unprecedented
call for Ingush to obey the law. “In the name of your lives and the lives of those
close to you, don’t violate the self-isolation regime! Stay home and let us
work defending you from criminals!”
“Don’t distract us from our real work by
requiring us to search for and detain those who violate the self-isolation
regime! Be people and treat the police as people” because our 3,000 officers
are “people too,” the major general says (gazetaingush.ru/obshchestvo/my-tozhe-lyudi-obrashchenie-ministra-vnutrennih-del-po-respublike-ingushetiya).
Since isolation was introduced to combat
the pandemic, Korobkin says, “all of us from the minister and heads of units to
the ordinary policemen have been occupied with one thing: patrolling the
streets, checking addresses and stopping cards only in order to find violators
of the self-isolation regime.”
“The number of violators is growing,” he
continues. We are occupied with what the law tells us to be – the writing up of
tickets about violations and bringing violators to administrative
responsibility.” That’s hardly the task we should be focusing on – righting crime
and countering extremism and terrorism. But those are our orders.
Korobkin continues: “Not long ago, we were
pride by a special professional achievement: Ingushetia has the very lowest
crime rate in Russia.” But now we can’t devote our efforts to continuing that
record.
“Let us work! Don’t pull us away from the struggle
with criminals, terrorists and extremists! Don’t force us to continue a banal
patrolling of the streets only because you aren’t sitting at home! Think about
yourselves! If the police don’t fulfill their main work, you will have to live
in great danger!”
But also “think about us, about the
police! We also have lives like yours. We risk being infected by the
coronavirus much more than you do … Among our ranks are those who are infected
and ill, who have been kept from doing their jobs by illness and isolation.
Show pity for your brothers and landsmen! Show pity as people.”
What is particularly unpleasant, the MVD
chief says, is that some Ingushetia residents call us names when all we are trying
to do is our jobs. “Your insults leave painful
wounds on our souls. We are people too! We have souls!” You need to stay at home to “save hundreds
and thousands of lives.” We need to get back to our real work.
Since the pandemic started, Korobkin
notes, appeals from doctors to citizens to do the right thing have become
commonplace. They are on the front lines
of the fight but so are the police. “We also are forced to work in hellish
conditions to save people.” And we too have the right to say to all of you “Stay
home!”
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