Joseph Stalin on Killing People
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.azquotes.com/quote/280673]
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INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=3191#.V7GTZaIixNg
“Give Us Back Capital
Punishment, Iosif Vissarionovich!”
Publication:
North Caucasus Analysis Volume: 7 Issue: 12
December
31, 1969 07:00 PM Age: 47 yrs
By:
John
B. Dunlop
In
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s novel, The First Circle, which depicts events
occurring in December 1949, there is a scene in which General Viktor Abakumov,
Minister of State Security, pays a late-night visit to Stalin’s windowless
office. At one point in their conversation, Abakumov begins to plead with the
dictator, “Give us back capital punishment, Iosif Vissarionovich!”
“One day soon I will give you back capital punishment,” Stalin promises his minion. “It will be a good educational measure.” After
Abakumov has left the office, Stalin then reproaches himself: “More than
anything else he had suffered during the last two years for having yielded to
the impulse to brag to the West [over the USSR’s having officially abolished
the death penalty].”
These
passages from Solzhenitsyn’s 1968 novel came to mind when one read news reports
that the Russian Deputy Prosecutor General, Nikolai Shepel, had, in summing up
the prosecution’s case against accused Chechen terrorist Nurpasha Kulaev—the
sole individual arrested at the time of the September 2004 Beslan
hostage-taking event—demanded that the court sentence Kulaev to death. As a
number of Russian journalists noted at the time, Shepel’s request was a strange
one, since Russia under President Yeltsin had introduced a moratorium on the
death penalty in 1996, when it joined the Council of Europe. Writing in the
February 16 issue of the pro-democracy newspaper Novaya gazeta, journalist
Dmitry Lyukaitis commented: “It is fully likely that the prosecutor’s
declaration received prior approval from above. It could be used to prepare
public opinion for a renewal of the practice of execution.” In the opinion of
Lyukaitis and others, the Putin regime wants to begin executing its political
opponents, and the Kulaev case can serve as a useful wedge issue in achieving
this goal.
Pavel
Krashennikov, a liberal former Russian justice minister who currently serves as
the chair of the State Duma’s committee on legislation, termed Shepel’s plea to
the court “inadmissible.” “There can be no exceptions to the rules,” he
emphasized (Newsru.com, February 9). In similar fashion, the relatively liberal
chair of the Council of the President of the Russian Federation to Assist the
Development of the Institutions of a Civil Society and Human Rights, Ella
Pamfilova, underlined her conviction that the problem of terrorism in Russia
cannot be solved through reinstating the death penalty. She took note of the
fact that “a majority of the inhabitants of Russia support a lifting of the
moratorium on the death penalty,” but then added: “This is a case where the
[Russian] leadership must go against the opinion of the majority” (Newsru.com,
February 9).
Other
Russian officials have been less categorical. In early February, President
Vladimir Putin, responding to a question from Spanish journalists, “remarked that
he is personally against the death penalty, but in dealing with this question,
he will take into consideration the mood of society and of Russian citizens.”
Putin was prepared to admit to the Spanish journalists that “There is no
correction [of behavior] resulting from the use of the death penalty”—that is,
it does serve as a deterrence to crime or terrorism. “It serves only as a
punishment.” On the other hand, Putin also took note of the fact that there
were “civilized” countries serving as a “bulwark of democracy,” for example,
the United States and Japan, which carry out public executions. In addition to
the opinion of the Russian citizenry, Putin added, he was required to take into
the account “the opinion of the body of [Russian parliamentary] deputies”
(Newsru.com, February 9).
It
soon emerged that several leading deputies in the Russian Parliament favored a
resumption of public executions. The influential first deputy speaker of the
dominant pro-Putin parliamentary faction, “Edinaya Rossiya,” Lyubov Sliska,
noted that public opinion in Russia supports a return to executions, especially
given the “anarchy” prevalent in the country, as well as “the growth of crime
and the activities of terrorists” (Nezavismaya gazeta, February 10).
In
a similar vein, the powerful chair of the State Duma’s Committee on Security,
Vladimir Vasiliev, a former deputy minister of the MVD, stated that the Duma is
prepared to restore the death penalty “if society demands it” (Novaya gazeta,
February 16). It should be remarked that since the regime fully controls state
television it is in an excellent position to mold public opinion on this issue.
Directly
related to the Kulaev case is the opinion of two feuding groups of Beslan
Mothers, the relatives of the 330 hostages who perished during the school
terrorist incident in early September 2004 (the Kremlin adroitly managed to
split the two groups). One group, the Mothers of Beslan, whose leading
spokeswoman is Susanna Dudieva, has come out strongly in support of Prosecutor
Shepel’s demand that Kulaev be executed. Clearly favored by the Kremlin, this
Mothers’ group was able to meet with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Louise Arbour when she visited Beslan on 22 February. They informed Arbour of
their pro-execution views.
The
other group of Mothers, “Voice of Beslan,” whose leading spokeswomen are Ella
Kesaeva and Emma Tagaeva-Betrozova, appear not particularly interested in
whether or not Kulaev is executed. They believe that it is the Russian power
ministers and other top officials, who ordered and directed the bloody assault
on the school on September 3, 2004, who need to be brought to trial. “We want
to know why they began our ‘rescue’ with firing from flamethrowers at a
gymnasium filled with children” (Gazeta.ru, February 18).
Upon
closer scrutiny, it emerges that the Mothers of Beslan organization under
Dudieva also wants key figures from the power ministries to be put on trial—for
example, FSB General Aleksandr Tikhonov, head of the Center for Special Purpose
based in Moscow, which spearheaded the assault on the school. They believe that
Kulaev should be executed and then that the “basic case” should begin. They
expressed this view in a letter to Putin that they handed to Ella Pamfilova who
had accompanied Louise Arbour on her visit to Beslan. Yet Deputy Prosecutor
General Shepel has already made it clear that, in the view of the Prosecutor
General's Office, the "basic case" with regard to Beslan does not
involve Russian officials but rather Shamil Basaev and the late Aslan Maskhadov
(Gazeta.ru, February 19).
The
accused Nurpasha Kulaev asserted at the conclusion of his trial that his
confession had been beaten out of him by investigators. “They beat me over the
course of four months. I couldn’t stand on my feet” (Newizv.ru, February 17).
Kulaev’s lawyer, Albert Pliev, in his summing up argument, noted that Russian
law enforcement had not followed obligatory legal procedures when they arrested
Kulaev: a transcript of his initial statement was not drawn up and his hands
were not tested for gunpowder residue. There is, he said, no credible
eyewitness evidence that Kulaev ever fired a weapon in the school (Nezavisimaya
gazeta, February 17). In a law-based state such gross infractions of legal
procedures could serve to exempt an accused from the death penalty.
What
is the Putin leadership seeking in seemingly pushing for a reinstatement of the
death penalty, even at the cost of Russia’s possible expulsion from the Council
of Europe? Writing in the February 16 issue of Novaya gazeta, journalist Leonid
Nikitinsky observed: “Putin will wash his hands, hinting that ‘The people are
always right.’ Even more will the leaders of the FSB, MVD and army rejoice…
Putin will watch the reaction of the Council of Europe…If Russia is not
expelled, then they can proceed further. And most likely Russia will not be
expelled [because of the West’s acute need for oil and gas]. If Russia is not
expelled for infringing the moratorium on the death penalty, then she can go
further and refuse to accept the decisions of the Strasbourg court [the
European Court for Human Rights].”
On
16 February, Tamerlan Aguzarov, the judge in the Kulaev case—there is no jury
—retired to consider his verdict. No date was given for its announcement
(Moscow Times, February 17).
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