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High Rates of Incarceration Shaping Russian Life and Moscow's
Image Abroad
Paul Goble, http://georgiandaily.com
Nearly
25 percent of Russian men have passed through their country's
prison system at some point in their lives, an enormous share of
the total and a group whose experiences are shaping Russian
society, politics, and even the country's image in foreign
capitals, according to a retired Supreme Court justice.
In
yesterday's "Rossiiskaya gazeta," Vladimir Radchenko provided extensive
data to support his argument that the percentage of Russians who
are in or who have passed through what he calls "our 'prison
population'" has reached a critical level in terms of its impact
on the broader society.
The impact of those who
returned from the GULAG in the 1950s has received a great deal
of attention, but that of those who were convicted or jailed at
the end of the Soviet period or since 1991 has received less,
Radchenko notes. But he points out that the numbers in each case
are large and current judicial arrangements suggest the numbers
and impact are on thel increase.
Between 1992 and 2007, more than 15 million citizens of the
Russian Federation were convicted in criminal cases, and five
million of them served time in the country's prisons or camps,
figures that constitute more than 10 percent and three percent
of the population respectively.
These figures represent a
huge jump from the late Soviet period, Radchenko points out.
Between 1987 and 1991, statistics show, only 2.5 million
Russians were convicted, a figure almost 50 percent lower per
year than in the post-Soviet Russian Federation, although higher
than the immediately preceding period because of a tightening of
republic legal codes.
At present, the jurist
continues, Russian society is being flooded with those – one
quarter of the adult male population – who now have "a jail
education" either in Soviet or Russian penal institutions. Not
only does this show that draconian laws do not cut crime –
indeed, they may result in more crimes being registered – but it
points to other developments as well.
Radchenko focuses on the
first of these consequences and urges both a revision in the
country's criminal code to reduce the number of those convicted
incarcerated and to improve the ways in which the penal system
prepares those it is about to release for re-entry into the
larger society.
But others are
highlighting Radchenko's argument about the impact of such
massive prison experience in Russian society and are extending
it as well. In a commentary on the Sobkorr.ru portal yesterday,
Yuri Gladysh notes that
such experience is leading to "the criminalization of Russian
society".
Not only are prisons and
camps leading their graduates to commit more crimes, he writes,
but the release and return of those who have served time "is
contributing to the rapid transformation of the country into an
enormous 'zone,' with all the ensuring consequences" that are
increasingly on public view.
Ever more widely are
individual Russians and Russian leaders using "criminal
terminology," the former because so many of them have experience
with the prison system and the latter because this allows them
to portray themselves as being close to the people. Vladimir
Putin's comments about the Chechens in 2000 and the Georgians
now are classic examples.
But that is far from the
worst consequence of former prisoners on Russian society,
Gladysh insists. On the one hand, their attitudes are having a
rapid and large impact on the values of that society,
undermining much of the "social-cultural" foundation on which
Russian society has rested "for several centuries.
And on the other, the
criminalization of Russia, especially as it has affected the
actions and statements of Russian leaders, has now had a serious
impact on the image of Russia abroad, both among its competitors
and more recently among its supposed closest friends, an impact
that is reducing Moscow's influence.
That has become especially
obvious during the Georgian crisis, the Sobkorr.ru commentator
says. And it can be clearly seen in the ways Russian leaders
have talked and acted over the last few weeks and Moscow
propagandists have regularly accused the West of wanting to act
as "international gendarmes."
"But how could it be otherwise?"
Gladysh asks rhetorically and with obvious bitterness. "After
all, when they are confronted by hooligans, law-abiding citizens
usually call the police. That is a completely natural reaction." |