Murder, drug
trafficking and other crimes are reportedly on the rise within the Russian
army. Some human rights advocates say ending the draft and instituting a
professional army would help bring about humane conditions.
A recent
report by Russian military prosecutor Sergei Fridinski paints a dismal picture
of conditions within the Russian army. He said in the first half of this year,
murders rose by more than half and drug trafficking increased 25 percent
compared to the first six months of 2011. The prosecutor also reported twice as
many bribes within the Russian army during the same period of time.
Culture of
blackmail
Mothers of soldiers killed in the Russian army demonstrate outside parliament |
Fridinski's
numbers come as no surprise to Ella Polyakova, chairwoman of the St. Petersburg
chapter of the Russian human rights organization Mothers of Soldiers. The statistics
correspond to what she expected.
"We've
been complaining that the conditions in the army are a crime against
humanity," Polyakova told DW.
Mothers of
Soldiers raises awareness about often unbearable conditions in the military.
With 12 months of compulsory military service still engrained in Russian law,
citizens try to circumvent the draft as much as possible, sometimes using
bribes.
Estimates
hold that only one-third of people drafted in the same year are actually
performing their military service.
Polyakova
said corruption and violence are flourishing within the army, with soldiers and
their families being blackmailed for bank cards and money. She added that the
extortion is often accompanied by torture and beatings.
Sergei
Krivenko, director of Russian human rights organization Citizens. Army.
Justice, said motives for violence in the army have changed.
"Before,
the violence served as a way of establishing order in the ranks," he said.
He went on to say that today, violence is for personal economic gain.
Free labor
Polyakova
said many in the military primarily view young troops as free labor. Conscripts
account for one third of the roughly 1 million members of Russia's armed
forces.
"For
example, officers might arrange for a pig farm within their military
unit," Polyakova said. "And then the soldiers are forced to raise and
later slaughter the pigs."
She said
there is also drug trafficking with the barracks.
"If a
soldier doesn't go along with it and a crime is supposed to be covered up, then
his life is in danger," she said.
Krivenko
knows about the drug trafficking, too. He attributed increasing drug use among
both volunteers and conscripts to crime, corruption and a complete lack of
discipline in the army.
Calls for
reform
Krivenko is
convinced that only the creation of a professional army, where all soldiers
enlist voluntarily, can improve the situation.
"A
career soldier has a completely different legal status," he said.
"He's a real soldier, he has rights and duties. He goes to the army as if
he were going to work."
Polyakova
agrees. She does not believe Russia can actually use the army in its current
state.
"We
must impose a moratorium on this army," she said. "If society is
convinced that it actually needs an army, then one will have to be created on a
completely new foundation."
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