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#8 - RW 10-22-04 - RW Home
Russia: Military Conscripts Caught In Deadly 'Cycle Of
Violence'
By Jeremy Bransten
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
The abuse of conscripts in the Russian military -- known as hazing or "rule
of the grandfathers" ("dedovshchina") in Russian -- is a widespread problem that
independent monitors say claims several thousand lives each year. The
nongovernmental organization Human Rights Watch has issued a new report based on
extensive research and interviews with current and former soldiers. It paints a
harrowing picture of life in today's Russian armed forces. As RFE/RL reports,
the U.S.-based group is calling on the Russian government to address the problem
of hazing -- or risk the complete demoralization and degradation of its armed
forces.
Prague, 21 October 2004 (RFE/RL) -- "Dedovshchina" is a word familiar to
anyone who passed through the ranks of the former Soviet armed forces.
Conscripts were expected to undergo periods of humiliation at the hands of older
soldiers, as a rite of passage.
But it rarely cost them their lives.
Over the past decade, however, things have deteriorated in the Russian
military. A fundamental change in the social structure of recruits, lack of
money, and a shortage of qualified officers has led to a breakdown in
discipline. Hazing no longer serves as an initiation ceremony, but has
degenerated into systematic, vicious abuse that allows officers and second-year
recruits to terrorize first-year conscripts.
Diederik Lohman, Human Rights Watch's representative in Moscow, describes the
process.
"Conscripts serve two years. The first year they are victims of hazing
abuses, and then in the second year, they actually perpetrate the hazing
themselves. What seems to be the motor behind this cycle of violence continuing
is the desire for revenge. The only way conscripts can suffer through their
first year is with the prospect of being compensated for their suffering the
next year by being able to inflict the same on the next generations of
conscripts," Lohman said.
Every year, some 800,000 conscripts enter the Russian military. For their
first 12 months, as described in the Human Rights Watch report, they are virtual
slaves to their older colleagues, forced to hand over money, food, personal
effects, and perform tasks day and night for their "masters." Insubordination is
punished by beatings and humiliation. The climate of scarcity in the Russian
military -- where food supplies and proper supplies are often inadequate --
encourage this system.
The drop in the quality of both recruits and junior officers over the past 10
years also helps to perpetuate the cycle of violence. Any young man with hopes
of getting a higher education or who has parents with any contacts or savings
will try to purchase his way out of the draft. That leaves the poorest and most
uneducated young men to serve. Many of them come from broken homes. Some have
already been in trouble with the law.
It is a problem the Russian Defense Ministry acknowledges. Forty percent of
last year's recruits were high-school dropouts. Half were classified as having
problems with alcohol. In September 2002, Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov
characterized the conscripts drafted in the fall of that year as a "pathetic
lot, afflicted with drug addiction, psychological problems, and malnutrition."
Junior officers, charged with supervising recruits, sometimes take part in
the abuse. More often, they close their eyes to it. Junior officers receive only
a fraction of the training they once enjoyed and are often not capable of
handling unruly soldiers -- leaving recruits to fend for themselves.
Tatyana Znachkova is head of the Moscow office of the Committee of Soldiers'
Mothers, an NGO founded in 1989 to help young men facing difficulties in the
military. The group offers legal assistance to draftees who are seeking to defer
their service or to abused conscripts who have filed complaints or -- in more
extreme cases -- deserted their units.
Znachkova tells RFE/RL that she often hears from junior officers who tell her
they cannot cope.
"Sometimes you speak to an officer serving on a base where hazing is taking
place because of the presence of these uncontrollable soldiers. And sometimes
you even feel sorry for the officer, because he tells you: 'I have no levers.
How can I control these soldiers? They should be put in prison, not called up to
serve in the army. They are basically criminals,'" Znachkova said.
According to the Committee of Soldiers' Mothers, some 4,000 conscripts die
every year in the Russian military as a result of hazing. That statistic is
disputed by the Russian military, which says that in the first half of this
year, 25 soldiers died as a result of hazing, while another 60 committed suicide
because of bullying.
Nevertheless, the cheapness of a recruit's life in the Russian military is
illustrated by an incident in January, in which one conscript froze to death and
50 others were hospitalized with pneumonia after being forced to spend a day in
Arctic temperatures -- without proper clothing -- at an airfield in the Far
Eastern Magadan region. The case caused such an uproar that President Vladimir
Putin ordered an investigation.
But Lohman says for every case that is uncovered, there are many others that
are never investigated. The government, he says, has no strategy for stamping
out abuse in the military.
"The problem with the Russian government's policy towards hazing throughout
recent years has been that all steps that have been taken have been ad hoc [for
specific cases, without general application]. Really, what you need here is a
much more structural approach. The government needs to take systematic steps to
eradicate the problem and not deal with just one individual case. There are many
other cases that are similar -- maybe they're not as egregious as this
particular one was, but they're still there, and Putin isn't talking about them,
nor is anybody else," Lohman said.
Human Rights Watch is calling on the Russian government to create a task
force to design and implement a comprehensive strategy for combating the abuses.
It is also calling for the creation of a special ombudsman for military
servicemen under Russia's general ombudsman, Vladimir Lukin.
Znachkova notes it is sometimes hard to tell the difference between acts of
hazing and the general misery of a soldier's life in the Russian armed forces.
"There are, of course, military bases where the food is decent and living
conditions are OK. But unfortunately, there are other bases where once the cold
weather hits, the barracks will have floors covered with ice, where the walls
will freeze through, like in a prison, like in the gulag," Znachkova said.
Activists fighting for better conditions in the Russian armed forces say no
country that treats its soldiers like prisoners in a forced labor camp can
expect to have a strong, capable military.
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