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#21 - RW 12-17-04 - RW Home
RUSSIA'S DEFENSE AUTHORITIES OPTIMISTIC ABOUT FUTURE OF
ALTERNATIVE SERVICE PROGRAMS
MOSCOW, December 15 (RIA Novosti) - Defense officials in Russia say they have
got the institute of alternative civilian service up and running now.
Colonel General Vasily Smirnov, Head of the Mobilization Department of the
Russian Armed Forces' General Staff, said at an online conference Wednesday that
he and his colleagues believed "the institute of alternative civilian service
has been developing quite successfully. The first experience of implementing the
federal law on alternative civilian service has shown that its provisions
promote to a sufficient degree the realization of citizens' constitutional right
to the replacement of draft military service with alternative civilian service
and [that they] have no flaws or contradictions." His statement comes just two
weeks before the end of the three-month draft campaign, going on since September
1.
According to General Smirnov, the number of Russian draftees opting for
civilian service is not very large. "In the fall of 2004, 616 citizens filed
applications for the replacement of draft military service with alternative
civilian service. These applications are currently under consideration," the
official said. He indicated that not all of the applicants would be enlisted for
alternative service programs as some of these people had legitimate grounds for
draft exemption or postponement.
Draft dodging, too, has been showing a downward tendency lately, although the
number of dodgers is still rather high, Vasily Smirnov said.
According to reports submitted to the General Staff, 3,182 fewer young men
dodged draft in the spring of 2004 than in 2003, he said. "On the face of it,
some progress has been made in solving this problem: the number of draft dodgers
is displaying a tendency toward shrinking, but in fact, it still remains rather
high," he remarked.
"It has to be noted that this phenomenon [draft dodging] has to this day
retained its acuteness, its wide scale, its strongly pronounced negativism, and
it continues to complicate the conduct of conscription-related events," General
Smirnov pointed out. He cited Defense Ministry statistics indicating that 21,000
draft-age men skipped this year's drafting campaign (as of December 10, 2004),
against 25,200 in 2003.
General Smirnov expressed confidence that through joint effort on the part of
local government bodies, drafting committees and law-enforcement agencies, the
number of draft dodgers would be brought down by the end of this year's
campaign.
Sergei Krivenko, secretary of the coalition For Democratic Alternative
Civilian Service, said early on that about a thousand Russian draftees would be
enlisted for alternative service in the spring and winter of 2004 and that there
was no chance they would be sent to army units or to Chechnya. Most will just
remain where they are, and will be working at a military plant or a nursing
home, he said, adding that the main problem for alternative service was the lack
of jobs.
According to Mr. Krivenko, 59 draftees are involved in alternative civilian
service programs at the moment, with almost all of them affiliated with the
Jehovah's Witnesses religious sect. "They serve in their residence areas, for
the most part," he said. The majority is working for welfare institutions, such
as nursing homes, but there are also a few sent to military plants and
construction sites, he reported.
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