Paul Goble
Staunton, June 10 – Russian law allows for punishing those found guilty of cruelty to animals to be sentenced to up to five years behind bars, but these provisions of the criminal code are seldom enforced by the authorities and do little to limit often sadistic treatment of dogs, cats and other animals by the Russian population, the Kedr Media portal says.
The most recent statistics released by the Russain Supreme Court show that in 2024, only 14 of the 199 Russians charged with animal cruelty were sentenced to any jail time, 21 received suspended sentences, and the remaining 164 were fined or ordered to perform community service of one kind or another (kedr.media/stories/zhivoder-obyknovennyj/).
These figures dramatically understate just how much cruelty Russians inflict on animals. According to the government itself, 25 of the country’s federal subjects don’t release any information at all regarding animal cruelty and in them, Kedr says, the police often refuse to register cases even when someone reports what is going on.
Animal rights activists say that the problem is widespread, although given the lack of statistics, they aren’t in a position to say whether the situation in the Russian Federation is significantly worse than in other countries. But psychologists warn that the tolerance by the authorities and the population for such cruelty has a far broader social impact.
Those who live in families where cruelty to animals is viewed as normal and something the state should not intervene to prevent often normalize cruelty as such and then treat other family members, friends and relatives, and other people more generally in the same way, making the society far more cruel not just to dogs and cats but to people as well.
Consequently, these psychologists say, Russians and others have a compelling interest not just in eliminating cruelty to animals because of the suffering it inflicts on beings often incapable of defending themselves but also because it contributes to attacks by those who tolerate or even encourage it on people, something most but tragically far from all oppose.