http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/1010/42/379532.htm

The Moscow Times ยป Issue 4188 

Activists Criticize 'Repressive' Army Draft
15 July 2009By Dmitry Solovyov / Reuters 
Human rights activists have accused the Defense Ministry of using repressive 
methods in this year's military conscription that could derail official plans 
for a professional army. "We had expected the Defense Ministry would launch a 
fierce assault on civil society, but who would have thought it would be so 
unprecedentedly brazen," said Ella Polyakova, a senior member of the Soldiers' 
Mothers human rights group. She said police had raided student hostels, looking 
for "draft dodgers." Sometimes students had been detained on their way to exams 
even though they qualified for deferment from service. 

Young men with serious health problems were being drafted to boost conscription 
numbers. Some diagnoses on medical records were being arbitrarily downgraded to 
lesser ones, said Tatyana Kuznetsova, a Soldiers' Mothers leader. "There was no 
need for repression," said Kuznetsova, also a member of the human rights 
ombudsman's expert council. "Earlier, they could draft a flat-footed one, but 
this time around they took even those with ulcer, asthma, dermatitis and even 
heart disease. . Why do you need an army of people who are lame, sick, one-eyed 
and unwilling to serve?" she said at a news conference Monday. The Defense 
Ministry declined to comment immediately. 

Documented cases of grave diseases among draftees include high blood pressure, 
severe diabetes, neurosis and epilepsy. The Defense Ministry has announced 
plans to build smaller but more mobile, better-paid, better-equipped, 
professional armed forces. But the rising numbers of conscripts indicate that 
Russia is still far from building a truly professional army, critics say. The 
armed forces have drafted more than 305,000 conscripts in this year's spring 
conscription campaign and plan to boost this number to around 400,000 in the 
fall. The military says greater numbers are needed to compensate for a 
reduction of the military-service term from two years to one.  "I hate to say 
this, but in fact such a conscription with numerous violations calls this 
reform into question, if not spells the death of it," said Sergei Krivenko, 
coordinator of the public movement Citizen and the Army. 

Human rights bodies say even young men with criminal records were drafted this 
year. Official data show 471 Russians died while serving last year, 29 more 
than in 2007. More than half of all deaths last year were suicides, often 
caused by the deep-rooted tradition of hazing, when older soldiers bully and 
humiliate younger ones. But it is not only ordinary soldiers who commit crimes. 
Chief Military Prosecutor Sergei Fridinsky said last week that crimes among 
officers hit a 10-year high in the first half of this year. "We are now 
investigating the case of soldier Anton Kuznetsov, who was sold by an officer 
into bondage and spent five years working as a slave at a brick factory in 
Dagestan," Polyakova said

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