Maintenance

Repression in Russia: "All opponents of the war are targeted"

Силовики задерживают мужчину на Акции против Военного нападения Рф На украину, Москва, 13 Марта 2022 г.

AFP - -

Text by: Daniel Vallot Follow

4 mins

Every people, the Russian people in particular, recognizes scum and traitors and can spit them out like a fly in the mouth

 ," said Vladimir Putin on Wednesday March 16.

Words justified this Thursday by Dmitri Peskov, the spokesman for the Kremlin, evoking a "

 purification 

" of Russia in favor of the conflict in Ukraine.

The discourse of the authorities is becoming more and more violent towards all those who dare to challenge them, as explained by Françoise Daucé, specialist in Russia at the EHESS.

Advertising

Read more

RFI: Vladimir Putin speaks of a "

fifth column

", of "

traitors

" in the pay of the West whose objective would be to "

destroy

" Russia.

Who is this speech aimed at

?

Françoise Daucé:

We can think of all those who spoke out against the war in Ukraine, all the citizens – and there were a great many of them – who signed petitions to protest against the conflict.

And then, of course, there are all those who have already been targeted for a long time by the Russian authorities, and in particular all the organizations which have been classified as "foreign agents" since 2012, and which are likely to be victims of these threats of "

cleansing

" society.

Wouldn't there also be the desire to send a message to the oligarchs who are not loyal to him

?

Against the oligarchs, the threats were especially strong at the start of Vladimir Putin's first term.

We remember the case of

Mikhail Khodorkovsky

, arrested and imprisoned for almost ten years.

Lately, threats have been hanging over other groups in society, activists

like Alexei Navalny

and his Anti-Corruption Foundation which was declared an “

 extremist organization 

” in 2021. But it is entirely possible that in In the context of war, these threats translate into arrests in different groups of society.

Seeing your opponents go abroad is also a way of keeping them away and getting rid of them

Does Vladimir Putin want to push people to flee Russia if they don't agree with him, or does he want to launch a series of arrests and purges of society

?

The two movements are concomitant.

On the one hand, we are witnessing a very important movement of exile of the most threatened militants in Russia.

And you see a lot of Russian citizens trying to leave, having become aware of this violence and the possibility of the Russian state turning against them.

This is a first movement that the government allows: seeing its opponents go abroad is also a way of keeping them away and getting rid of them!

And then the second movement which is concomitant is the repression against people who cannot leave or who choose to stay to continue trying to change the situation from within.

For these people, indeed, the threat is very worrying and could be very violent.

Especially since Russia

has left the Council of Europe

and is increasingly freeing itself from the rules of European and international law.

There was talk at one time in the ranks of the opposition, even before the war, of a return to 1937, that is to say to the Stalinist purges.

But many said at the time that we could not make this comparison.

Are we in the process today of switching all the same to something that is beginning to resemble it?

We have the feeling, with the start of the war, of witnessing a tipping point towards ever more violence inside the country, against the Russian population itself.

We are not yet at the Stalinist purges of the 1930s, at the Great Terror.

But this is what the violence of the speech given by Vladimir Putin suggests.

Russian President Vladimir Putin looking at a flag with Lenin and Joseph Stalin, March 6, 2020. © Alexei Nikolsky/Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

We can also think of all the repressions that can take place in a context of war against those who are considered the "

fifth column

", the term used by Vladimir Putin to designate the " 

traitors

 ", that is to say all those who are not united, loyal to the cause of the government.

So it's both probably the reminiscence of the darkest hours of the Soviet period, and the mobilization of tools of repression specific to wartime.

►Also read: In Russia, at least 5,000 arrests of protesters opposed to the war in Ukraine

Newsletter

Receive all the international news directly in your mailbox

I subscribe

Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application

google-play-badge_FR

  • Russia

  • Ukraine

  • Vladimir Poutine