Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Moscow cops stop mostly minorities

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

  • Moscow cops stop mostly minorities

    from the June 23, 2006 edition

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0623/p07s02 -woeu.html
    <http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0623/ p07s02-woeu.html>

    Moscow cops stop mostly minorities

    Racial profiling study on Metro shows minorities are 22 times more
    likely to be singled out than whites.

    By Fred Weir | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

    MOSCOW

    Levon, who declines to give his last name, says his visit to Moscow has
    been a nonstop nightmare of police harassment and extortion, especially
    whenever he enters Moscow's underground transit system, the Metro.

    "The police always check me, and often they detain me claiming my
    papers are false," says the swarthy, middle-aged Armenian sports
    trainer. He's spent the past three months in Moscow caring for an
    ailing family member. "The police only let me go when I pay a bribe,
    usually about 500 rubles ($18). It happens at least twice a week. Every
    time I go outside, I feel like I'm heading for some unpleasantness."

    Stories like Levon's abound in Moscow, where anecdotal evidence - and
    a new study - show police routinely single out dark-skinned migrants
    from former Soviet republics as well as citizens from Russia's own
    southern regions for document checks that often lead to detention,
    harassment, and paying of bribes.

    Still experts say they are shocked by the results of a new study
    showing the scope of racial profiling by police in the Moscow Metro. It
    found that non-Slavs - are almost 22 times more likely to be stopped
    than those who look like fair-skinned ethnic Russians.

    By comparison, a similar survey in the US found that blacks traveling
    on a New Jersey highway were almost five times more frequently targeted
    by state police than whites.

    "In effect, any non-Slav can expect to be treated like an illegal
    alien by Moscow police," says Galina Kozhevnikova, deputy director
    of the Sova Center, a nonprofit group that works on civil rights
    issues. "The growing xenophobia in society is bad enough, but it's
    clearly much worse in the police. Something urgently needs to be done."

    Experts say the study results are particularly disturbing
    at a time when hate crimes by skinhead and neo-Nazi groups are
    rising. Ms. Kozhevnikova, whose organization tracks ultra-nationalist
    activities, says that 18 people have been killed and 147 injured in
    racist attacks in Russian cities so far this year.

    The United Nations special rapporteur on racism, Doudou Diene, told
    a Moscow press conference last week that Russia is suffering from a
    post-Communist "ideological vacuum" which aids the proliferation of
    xenophobic and racist ideas. During his visit to Russia, he met with
    resident Africans, Roma, and other minorities who told him they are
    regular targets of violence.

    The study, in which monitors observed more than 1,500 police document
    checks at 15 Metro stations over a five-month period in 2005, concluded
    that Moscow police are engaged in "massive ethnic profiling." The
    practice is unlawful discrimination, a violation of the equal rights of
    citizens under the Russian Constitution and the country's international
    commitments. For example, the United Nations Race Convention prohibits
    racial discrimination with respect to "freedom of movement," and
    guarantees the "right to equal treatment" by judicial officials.

    Anita Soboleva, executive director of Jurix, the lawyers' group
    that conducted the survey with funds from George Soros' Open Society
    Institute, says "Police ethnic profiling reflects social attitudes
    against people who look 'different.' This racist approach appears to
    be deeply ingrained in police procedures."

    While many of the estimated 3 million "migrant" workers in Moscow come
    from former Soviet republics in the Caucasus and Asia - and even as
    far afield as China and Vietnam - many others are members of Russia's
    own 20 million-strong Muslim community. The study suggests that Moscow
    police treat all non-Slavs alike, whether Russian citizens or not. "The
    danger here is that non-Slavs are made to feel themselves second-class
    citizens in the capital of their own country," says Olga Schedrina,
    a researcher at the government's Institute of Sociology in Moscow.

    At one downtown Moscow Metro stop covered in the study, non-Slavs were
    85 times more likely to be stopped than fair-skinned people. "We're
    very concerned that police conduct toward non-Slavs... will reinforce
    social prejudices. People think, 'if the police do it, that must be
    right,' " Ms. Soboleva says.

    Police and state officials have been given copies of the study,
    released this month, but have yet to comment on it. The authors say
    that identification-checking sweeps through Metro stations not only
    raise social tensions, they appear to be a misuse of resources in
    the battle against crime and terrorism: Only 3 percent of the 1,500
    checks witnessed by survey monitors found any kind of infraction,
    in most cases very minor ones.

    "We hope to dialogue with the police about this, because it
    seems certain that their energies could be better spent," says
    Soboleva. "Defenders of police practices usually say this approach
    is because of the high rate of ethnic crime, but no statistics back
    this up. Nor is there any evidence that these document checks of
    the population have ever slowed down any terrorist actions. It's not
    clear they have any good purpose at all."

    Russian police have the right to check anyone's ID, and hold him
    or her for up to three hours while documents are verified. Even the
    slightest problem, such as lack of Moscow residential registration,
    can lead to detention of up to 48 hours.

    www.csmonitor.com <http://www.csmonitor.com/> | Copyright © 2006
    The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

    --Boundary_(ID_OJUzvaFmdhcY5kIFTBaiEw)- -
Working...
X