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  • No-Nonsense Murder

    NO-NONSENSE MURDER
    By Dmitry Babich

    Russia Profile
    September 23, 2008
    Russia

    As Skinheads Organize Into "Communities," Racially-Motivated Killings
    Become Routine

    In the last few years, Russia has come to house ever more immigrants
    from Central Asia and the Caucasus. But as the number of migrants
    grows, so does the number of fascists, the latter becoming more
    aggressive and impudent. It took the death of a famous chess player
    at the hands of the racists for the authorities to take note, but
    they now seem to be retaliating with tougher prison sentences even
    for underage criminals.

    The sentencing in Moscow of 13 underage skinheads, found guilty of two
    murders and more than ten racist attacks, indicates a new, tougher
    line on racist violence that the authorities and the courts seem to
    have adopted. The prosecutor demanded up to 22-year-long prison terms
    for the young racists, but the court felt restricted by the fact that
    only one of the accused, Ivan Kalinichenko, was older than 18 when the
    attacks took place. He was sentenced to ten years in a penal colony
    and could barely hide his joy, having expected tougher punishment. Ten
    years is the maximum an underage criminal can get in Russia.

    The other criminals, all of them underage at the time of the murders,
    committed less than a year ago, received milder sentences, with one
    boy (15-year-old Linar Kosyak) getting just three years.

    "I noticed that in the last few years, the courts started handing
    out tougher sentences," said Semyon Charny, the author of a recently
    published book "Xenophobia and Intolerance in Russia." "This started
    with a trial in Voronezh several years ago. Maybe, the courts and
    the authorities started to realize the danger that racism poses to
    Russia. Pressure from the Public Chamber of the Russian Federation and
    some mass media, horrified by the recent surge in racially-motivated
    violence, also played a role."

    In the first six months of 2008, 80 people were killed in 171
    racially-motivated attacks in Russia, a country of 144 million
    people. Racist violence has been growing exponentially in the last
    four to five years, when Russia experienced several waves of migration
    from Central Asia and the Caucuses, becoming second only to the United
    States in terms of the number of migrants residing on its territory.

    Kalinichenko's group of young racists has been conducting attacks
    on a routine basis for several months. The group caught the eye of
    the police after its members went on a beating spree on the night of
    October 20, 2007. On that fateful night, the gang's members met after
    contacting each other via the Internet. Having seen an Asian-looking
    man on the street, they pushed him to the ground and beat him to
    death with baseball bats. The man happened to be Sergei Nikolayev, a
    famous chess player from Russia's Siberian region of Yakutia. Having
    finished him off, the killers attacked an Uzbek street cleaner, and
    later a 24-year-old Armenian, who bled to death before the paramedics
    arrived. Since Nikolayev was a well-known man in his region, and the
    "fashion" of the killings left no doubt about the racial motives,
    the police began investigating the murders. One of the killers,
    Stanislav Gribach, hurt himself with his knife during the attack and
    asked for medical help. Doctors reported him to the police, and the
    murderer was identified by blood stains on his clothes.

    Journalists present at the sentencing were surprised by the aggressive
    behavior of the defendants and their parents. Instead of repenting,
    one of the convicted criminals raised his arm in a Nazi salute, and the
    parents cursed at the journalists, suggesting to "settle the scores"
    outside the courtroom.

    The case of Kalinichenko's group is just the first in what appears to
    be a series of "skinhead trials." In July, around the same time as
    Kalinichenko's, the case of another group headed by an 18-year-old
    skinhead, Artur Ryno, was passed from prosecutors to the Moscow
    city court.

    Ryno, a former student of icon painting, is accused of 21 murders
    and confessed to having committed them all alone. Sergei Belikov,
    an activist of the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights and the author of a
    book on racist movements among Russia's youth titled "Nazi Fighters,"
    suspects that Ryno is deliberately exaggerating the number of "his"
    murders.

    "During the last few years, die-hard skinhead racists developed
    a perverted sense of group solidarity, which sometimes borders on
    self-sacrifice," Belikov said. "Knowing that he will be jailed for life
    anyway, Ryno may be deliberately taking these murders upon himself in
    order to shield some members of his group from punishment. For police,
    this is a good excuse to terminate an investigation: since the killer
    confessed, there will be fewer questions asked."

    In Belikov's opinion, skinhead groups in Russia, once loose gangs of
    rowdy uneducated youths, crystallized in the last few years, becoming
    more aggressive, disciplined and devoted. "Before, many skinheads just
    played a sort of a nasty game, where Nazi paraphernalia and racist
    language were considered signs of 'coolness'," Belikov said. "Now
    it is much more difficult to enter the group and to gain its members
    trust. Now they are involved in a serious business - murder."
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