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The Independent (UK)
4 January 2002
Thousands of Russian prisoners are still suffering in
Gulag Archipelago
By Michael McCarthy
Russia's Gulag Archipelago of prison camps in the far north is still
functioning, with prisoners enduring "unacceptable" conditions of
winter cold and summer insect bites, the conference was told.
More than 120 "forest colonies" of remote labour camps dating from
the Stalin era of political persecution are being used to house tens of
thousands of criminals, said Judith Pallot, a geography lecturer at Oxford
University.
Reporting on two valleys in the Perm region of the northern Ural mountains,
the Kolva and the Berezovaya, Dr Pallot said they contained compounds ringed by
watchtowers on the edge of the forest, They had held prisoners since the
Thirties, although the inmates were now typically murderers rather than
political dissidents.
The average temperature for the region over the whole year was minus 1C, and
during the long winter, from October to May, it fell as low as minus 40C, while
in the summer insect bites were "absolute hell", Dr Pallot said. The
inmates had been regularly marched into the forest to cut timber before the
recent collapse of the local timber market. There were believed to be about
10,000 prisoners in the two valleys.
The common perception was that the Gulag Archipelago of camps, made famous by
the writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn, had been swept away after Joseph Stalin's
death, and certainly by the present day. There were tourist trips to the former
camps on the Solovietski islands in the Arctic Ocean, Dr Pallot said, similar to
those run to the Robben Island prison off the South African coast that once held
Nelson Mandela.
"But we were surprised to find that there are still whole regions of
northern Russia where prisoners are serving out their sentences perhaps
thousands of miles from where they committed their offences," she said.
"These camps are entirely in the wrong place and it is not
acceptable."
There were known to be 122 remaining "forest colonies" of prisoners
in remote areas, she said. Conditions in them were thought to be particularly
bad because in the Russian prison system camps were expected to cover their own
costs, but often could not do so.
The Russian government was aware of the problem but was struggling to cope
with a severely overcrowded prison system, Dr Pallot said. In January 2001 the
prison population was 924,000, including 200,000 awaiting trial. With 729
prisoners per 100,000 citizens, Russia had one of the world's highest rates of
incarceration.
The problem was that people were given custodial sentences for relatively
trivial offences, Dr Pallot said. "What they need is a good probation
service and the idea of community service for minor theft."
Dr Pallot also reported on a neighbouring valley in the Perm region, the
Vishera, where a labour camp was abolished in 1990. Many of the former
inhabitants, political detainees from the Soviet era or their descendants, had
decided to remain in the area. They had reverted to a subsistence economy,
growing potatoes, gathering berries and mushrooms and killing game in the
forest.
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