Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia: racism on the rise

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia: racism on the rise

    RUSSIA: RACISM ON THE RISE
    Zygmunt Dzieciolowski

    Open Democracy, UK
    April 26 2006

    A spate of attacks against ethnic minorities and African students
    reflects a wider growth of nationalist political sentiment, says
    Zygmunt Dzieciolowski.

    Anjani Kumar is a 23-year-old student at St Petersburg's Mechnikoff
    Medical Academy. As he was returning to his hostel one night, a group
    of youths attacked him, stabbing him in the neck.

    Zaut Tutov is the minister of culture for the autonomous republic of
    Kabardino-Balkaria in the northern Caucasus. He was taking his daughter
    home from dance classes when fifteen skinheads surrounded him, shouting
    "Russia for the Russians", and beat him up.

    Both Anjani Kumar and Zaut Tutov were lucky: they survived. Dozens
    of other victims of racially motivated assaults over the past fifteen
    months did not. Recent victims were a nine-year-old Tajik girl in St
    Petersburg, a Chinese street-trader in Vladivostok, and students from
    Guinea-Bissau and Peru who were killed in Voronezh. In the central
    Russian city of Volzhsky, a man and a woman died when skinheads armed
    with steel rods attacked a gypsy camp.

    Zygmunt Dzieciolowski is a Polish journalist and writer who has
    reported on Russia for leading German, Swiss and Polish newspapers
    since 1989. He is the author of the book Planet Russia, published in
    Poland in 2005.

    In what appear to be the latest cases, a 17-year-old ethnic Armenian
    university student died on 22 April after being stabbed on a Moscow
    metro station platform, and a young Tajik man died from knife wounds
    on 24 April after he and his companion were attacked while walking
    in Moscow.

    "We have been living in Moscow for nearly ten years", a Tajik friend
    told me. "We experienced no fear when we arrived. We felt at home,
    despite the anti-Caucasian sentiment following the fighting in
    Chechnya. It's different now. We are worried that the Asian features
    of our teenaged children might lead to them being beaten up. I told
    them to be especially careful if they're out late or visiting friends
    in remote neighbourhoods."

    Even in a country with 140 million people, the number of attacks is
    alarming. In 2005, twenty-eight people died in hate attacks in Russia,
    and 366 were wounded. The number of murders in 2006 is already well
    into double figures. Human-rights activists say these figures hide
    the true number, and that people of different races, skin colours
    and anti-fascist groups are all targets of street violence.

    Groups calling for Russia to be cleansed of foreigners, and using
    fascist salutes and emblems, are now active in nearly every major
    Russian city. On 20 April, the birthday of Adolf Hitler, most black
    students living in Russia spent the day at home rather than risk
    being caught outside by skinheads.

    The members of these gangs are generally young, aged from thirteen to
    thirty, according to a report by the website gazeta.ru. They tend to
    come from low-income families and live in rundown suburbs. Around 1,000
    skinheads live in the Moscow region, most of them outside the capital
    itself. A majority of attacks take place on suburban trains and in
    neighbourhoods away from the bustling main streets of the city centre.

    The statistics in St Petersburg are even more alarming. The local
    governor, Valentina Matviyenko, has been unable to stop the city on
    the River Neva earning a reputation for hate crimes. The twenty large
    skinhead gangs in St Petersburg have an estimated 12,000 members.

    Across Russia, there are thought to be as many as 70,000 skinheads.

    Small Russian towns are covered in nationalist graffiti, swastikas
    and slogans like "Russia for the Russians" and "Death to Jews".

    The authorities have been unable or unwilling to deal with the
    explosion in these gangs, and some minorities have set up self-defence
    groups in response. At Moscow's Peoples' Friendship University
    (formerly Patrice Lumumba University), African students have set up
    their own self-defence groups.

    The roots of violence

    Much of the problem dates from the late 1980s, the years of Soviet
    collapse. At that time, members of the Pamyat group dressed in black
    and openly paraded their anti-semitism. Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the
    populist leader of the Liberal Democratic party, achieved unexpectedly
    good results in the 1993 parliamentary elections on the back of
    nationalist rhetoric; his party came in first, capturing nearly a
    quarter of the votes cast.

    The two wars in Chechnya and a series of terrorist attacks on
    targets across Russia fuelled ill-feeling towards Chechens and other
    Caucasians. Public opinion has also turned against Ukrainians,
    Georgians, Poles and Moldovans for their roles in the various
    "colour", or "flower", revolutions that have swept through a number
    of Russia's neighbours. Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians have also
    been criticised, thanks to the perceived prejudice and discrimination
    against Russian minorities in the Baltic states.

    The change and uncertainty that the collapse of the Soviet Union caused
    turned Russia into fertile ground for racism. But some journalists and
    opposition activists believe the alarming recent growth in xenophobic
    gangs is the result of something far more sinister. They think some
    interests are benefiting from the rise in nationalist sentiments, and
    argue that some politicians and secret services might be manipulating
    events as part of their struggle for power, wealth and influence. Some
    point out that powerful interest groups in the Kremlin are looking for
    ways to keep power in the same hands even after the end of Vladimir
    Putin's presidency in 2008.

    Many Russians, especially those with memories of the horrors of the
    Nazi invasion, wonder why Putin's government is so tolerant of those
    who use slogans reminiscent of Hitler's Germany. In his column for
    www.gazeta.ru, Georgy Bovt, the editor of Profil magazine, writes of
    his suspicion that skinheads are being used to intimidate and frighten
    the public into sticking with the establishment at the polls in 2008.

    Dmitri Rogozin, the former leader of the Rodina (Motherland) faction
    in the Duma and an enthusiastic supporter of nationalist politics,
    argues something similar. He sees the skinhead violence playing
    into the hands of those in the Kremlin at the next parliamentary
    and presidential elections. In a television interview in March, he
    predicted that politics would be "a struggle between the authorities
    and the fascists. This would help them to sell these undemocratic
    elections to the west. And as there were no real fascists in Russia,
    they were having to create them."

    Such a game, if the conspiracy theorists are right, would be extremely
    dangerous. Vyacheslav Nikonov, a member of the recently founded Public
    Chamber (an advisory body set up by the government as a bridge between
    the state and civil society after the 2004 Beslan school siege by
    Chechen guerrillas) believes the country's unity is at stake. "The
    ultimate result of slogans like 'Russia for the Russians'," he said
    in a recent speech, "is slogans like 'Tatarstan for the Tatars' or
    'Kabardino-Balkaria for the Kabardins and Balkarians'."

    The Kremlin's critics are even more outspoken in their warnings. They
    say Russia's multiculturalism, its future as a civilised state and
    even its continued existence as they know it could be under threat.
Working...
X