
#7
From: "Institute for War & Peace Reporting" <info@iwpr.net>
Subject: Caucasus Reporting Service No. 127
Date: Thu, 2 May 2002
MOSCOW SKINHEADS TARGET SOUTHERNERS
Suspicions are growing that attacks by groups of Moscow skinheads on Caucasian
traders are being carefully orchestrated By Sanobar Shermatova in Moscow Sanobar
Shermatova is a correspondent with Moscow News.
Skinhead groups have recently stepped up a campaign of violence in Moscow
that may be linked to a push to drive Caucasian traders out of the city's
markets.
No accurate statistics on the skinhead attacks are available as the police
usually suggest domestic violence or gangland revenge was the cause. According
to a Chechen student in Moscow, the families of Chechen victims of the attacks
never contact the police, as they fear they will only side with the assailants.
"The police would rather take the side of the skinheads who are Russian
than protect Chechens, whom they consider undesirable aliens," he told IWPR.
The wave of violence can be linked to rising antagonism against migrants from
the Caucasus and Central Asia - which is largely a consequence of two factors.
Firstly, many Muscovites believe they are behind much of the crime in the
city, a perception fuelled by the tendency of television news to cite the
nationality of criminals. Secondly, the government's "counter-terrorist
operation" in Chechnya has been accompanied by intensive propaganda
directed against Chechens and all Caucasian ethnic groups.
A recent Internet poll conducted by the weekly Moscow News found that only
4.3 per cent of Muscovites would try to stop skinheads attacking someone.
Another 58 per cent said they would simply ignore such incidents, while 37 per
cent would run away.
The latest high-profile victim of skinhead violence was a Russian citizen of
Afghan origin, Abdul Haqim Haqrisi, who was beaten to death in central Moscow
last month by a group of skinheads. Haqrisi, 35, a father of four, worked as a
translator for the Federal Migration Service.
The Afghan embassy protested to the Russian foreign ministry over the murder,
but a few days later several embassies in Moscow received threatening emails in
English from local skinheads, promising more murders of foreign nationals on or
around Hitler's birthday on April 20.
Police went on high alert on April 19. For three days most of the capital's
police were concentrated in the downtown area, with explicit instructions to
suppress skinhead activity. Thanks to these extraordinary measures, no attacks
occurred over this period.
Traders at one small outdoor market at Chertanovskaya Street in southern
Moscow marked Hitler's birthday in their own way. On April 20 they closed the
market, allegedly for cleaning, though there was no visible evidence of this. A
trader explained that this and other markets in the area had shut because of the
skinhead threat. "The market had to be closed because there are no police
to guard it. They are all in the centre of town," she said.
The outdoor markets, with their enormous cash flows, offer prime targets for
the skinhead groups. Last April and October, they attacked the markets at
Tsaritsino and Yasenevo in southern Moscow. Four people died in the first
incident and two in the second. Dozens were injured in both.
The largest group of traders at the outdoor markets are from the Caucasus,
selling produce at what locals perceive as exorbitant prices. Since the Soviet
era "southerners", usually Azerbaijanis, have had a virtual monopoly
on bringing fruit, vegetables and flowers from their homeland to Moscow.
About two million Azerbaijanis live in Russia, and most are engaged in
small-time trading. On average, an Azerbaijani expatriate sends 100 to 350 US
dollars monthly to his family back home.
Azerbaijanis, Chechens and Dagestanis also sell products from Central Asia.
Since Uzbek tomatoes and pomegranates are far pricier than similar Turkish
produce, only affluent Muscovites can afford them. Uzbekistan has recently
started shipping honey melons to Moscow, but the Uzbeks themselves have been
unable to secure a strong presence in the market trading sector.
The hierarchy at the markets fuels Russian resentment. At Chertanovo in the
south of Moscow, foreign traders rank higher than local Russian
"babushkas" (old ladies) selling greens, homemade jam and sauerkraut.
A local trader selling fresh parsley and dill recently had to move into the
street. "I cannot afford to pay the owner as much as they do," she
complained, waving at the Asian traders.
On his rare visits to the market, its Azerbaijani owner is accompanied by
three bodyguards. All traders pay him kickbacks on top of the regular fee
required by law. They do everything they can to keep local competition out of
the market, because locals offer the same merchandise far cheaper.
Police are frequently seen driving babushkas from the market and nearby
streets. The old women then have to bribe the police to stay in business, and
increase the price of their produce accordingly. This takes care of the
"price competition", and plays into the hands of the Asian traders.
Ordinary Moscow families, spending 200 or 250 US dollars a month on food, see
the Georgian, Uzbek and Tajik traders as scam artists who keep their prices
artificially high by cutting out the local traders.
Who is standing behind the skinheads? One theory has it that criminal groups
use the young men to do battle with their rivals on their behalf. Another
version holds that the police manipulate skinhead activity to keep the traders
under control. The police have been raiding outdoor markets in Moscow for two
years in a bid to squeeze out traders from the Caucasus. It has not worked, as
they have no legal grounds to ban traders from former Soviet Republics or the
North Caucasus.
But the skinheads also have an agenda of their own. The historian Semyon
Charny, in a study of their movement published recently in Moscow News, points
out that in the Soviet Union their origins date back to the 1950s. Charny
believes the authorities and the KGB were inactive in cracking down on the
skinheads because they wanted to use them to scare the Russian population.
Nowadays skinheads are active throughout Russia. "Our aim is
power," one of their leaders, Alexander Ivanov-Sukharevsky, told Moscow
News. "Hitler's idea was to liberate Russia from Jewish oppression and put
the Romanovs back on the throne, but God did not let Hitler achieve this at that
juncture. Our mission is to continue the cause of liberating the Russian people
from that oppression."
In the meantime, ethnic Russians traders have been gaining more control of
the markets. It is certainly in their interest to clear them of
"aliens" by whatever means. The idea that shadowy business groups are
behind the phenomenon of skinhead groups may not be far-fetched.
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