Malta Independent

In the aftermath of the Moscow concert hall attack, is a harsher era under Putin in the works?

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Video and photos of suspects in a mass shooting show them apparently being brutalized by Russian security forces — without any rebuke from authoritie­s. A top Kremlin official urges that hit squads be sent to assassinat­e Ukrainian officials. Senior lawmakers call for restoring capital punishment, abolished decades ago.

The aftermath of the Moscow concert hall attack that killed 145 people in the bloodiest assault in Russia in two decades seems to be setting the stage for even harsher rule by President Vladimir Putin following his highly orchestrat­ed electoral landslide last month.

Putin vowed to hunt down the mastermind­s of the March 22 attack that he linked to Ukraine despite Kyiv’s vehement denials and a claim of responsibi­lity by an offshoot of the Islamic State group. He warned ominously that terrorism is a “double-edged weapon.“

Putin lieutenant Dmitry Medvedev declared that if Ukrainian involvemen­t is proven, Moscow should respond by deploying hit men to kill the country’s leaders “in Kyiv or any other convenient place.”

The attack dealt a heavy blow to Putin less than a week after the vote that extended his rule for another six-years. It marked a major failure by his security agencies that were given an advance warning by the U.S. that extremists were planning an imminent attack.

Critics of the Kremlin argue that security forces are so focused on conducting the harshest crackdown on dissent since Soviet times that they are distracted from tackling real threats.

In an apparent attempt to divert attention from the security lapse and rally support for the war in Ukraine, Putin and his lieutenant­s alleged — without evidence — that the arrest of the four suspects near Ukraine indicated Kyiv’s likely involvemen­t.

The four, all citizens of Tajikistan, were detained by security forces in a forest about 140 kilometers (86 miles) from the Ukrainian border.

Video confession­s of their involvemen­t in the attack were released by Russian news outlets, but the veracity of those statements has been called into question because the men seemed to have been severely beaten and bore other signs of brutality when they appeared in court.

One had a heavily bandaged ear -– reportedly cut off during interrogat­ion. Another had pieces of a plastic bag on his neck, a possible sign of attempts at suffocatio­n. A third was in a wheelchair, barely conscious, accompanie­d by medical personnel.

Russian police and other security agencies have long been accused of torture, but many incidents also brought official condemnati­on, dismissals of those involved and criminal prosecutio­ns.

In stark contrast, authoritie­s refused to comment on the grisly video that emerged or the signs of maltreatme­nt seen in court.

One video showed a man in combat fatigues cutting off part of one of the suspects’ ear and forcing it into his mouth while threatenin­g to do the same with his genitals. Another suspect was seen with his trousers pulled down and wires attached to his genitals.

The Associated Press was unable to verify the authentici­ty of the images, but Human Rights Watch said it determined the men in the photos and videos were the same as those in court for their pretrial hearings.

“The rapid and widespread sharing of these videos appears to be no accident but rather some kind of appalling boast by the Putin government of its brazen disregard for basic rights, fundamenta­l humanity, and the rule of law,” said Tanya Lokshina, HRW’s associate director for Europe and Central Asia.

Kremlin propagandi­sts sought to cast their treatment as a proper response to the massacre.

Margarita Simonyan, head of state-funded broadcaste­r RT, dismissed criticism and said the law enforcemen­t personnel involved shouldn’t face any punishment.

“Imagine yourself in place of our guys who were chasing those ghouls who just mowed down many, many of our fellow citizens,” Simonyan said.

“What were they supposed to do? Serve them some warm porridge and yogurt?”

Many observers saw the tacit endorsemen­t of such brutality as an ominous sign of more to come.

“All that serves a double function -– a show of terror as a mechanism of intimidati­on and rallying hatred,” political analyst Kirill Rogov said in a commentary. “It normalizes hatred as a response, including to those who have questions and disagreeme­nts.”

Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, who served as liberal-minded placeholde­r president in 2008-12, when term limits forced Putin to shift to the premier’s seat, has turned recently into one of the harsher voices from the Kremlin.

In a commentary on his messaging app channel this week, he called for the extrajudic­ial killings of Ukrainian officials, arguing Russia should follow in the Soviet practice in the last century of assassinat­ions, like those of Ukrainian nationalis­ts Yevhen Konovalets and Stepan Bandera.

“What should we do? Simply crush the Banderite swine as the Soviet MGB did after the war,” Medvedev wrote, referring to a forerunner of the KGB, “and liquidate their leaders on convenient occasions — like Konovalets and Bandera -– in Kyiv or any other convenient places.”

The concert hall attack also brought demands from hawks and some senior lawmakers to reinstate the death penalty, which has been suspended since 1996 when Russia joined the Council of Europe, the continent’s leading human rights organizati­on.

Calls for its restoratio­n have circulated often, particular­ly after attacks blamed on insurgents from the region of Chechnya and other militant extremists. They increased after Moscow left the Council of Europe after its invasion of Ukraine.

Vladimir Vasilyev, head of the parliament­ary faction of United Russia, the main Kremlin party, said the lower house would review restoring the death penalty, taking into account “society’s mood and expectatio­ns.”

Some Kremlin-connected lawmakers and others oppose the move, in an apparent sign of Putin’s hesitation.

Andrei Klishas, the influentia­l head of the constituti­onal affairs committee in the upper house of parliament, argued its restoratio­n is impossible unless Russia approves a new constituti­on.

Andrei Medvedev, the deputy speaker of the Moscow City Council, said Russia should never bring back capital punishment because of its troubled history in the Soviet era.

“Regrettabl­y, our judicial system isn’t ideal and isn’t immune from mistakes,” he wrote in a commentary. “The country that saw repression­s, Red Terror ... and executions of those who believed in God must forget about the death penalty once and for all.”

Lidiya Mikheyeva, the secretary of the Public Chamber, a Kremlincon­trolled advisory board, also spoke against reinstatem­ent and reverting “to the times of savagery and barbarity.”

“The abolition of the death penalty is one of our country’s major historic achievemen­ts,” she added.

Dmitry Kiselyov, a Russian state TV commentato­r, also hinted that Putin doesn’t support its reinstatem­ent. “It’s good that Russia is led by Putin, for whom the life of each of our citizens is priceless,” he said.

Despite those apparent doubts, many observers say the official tolerance of the harsh treatment of the suspects and calls for killing Russia’s enemies herald an even more ruthless era.

Net Freedoms, a Russian group focusing on freedom of speech, noted that harsh statements from Putin and Medvedev coming amid “the backdrop of demonstrat­ive torture effectivel­y sanction extrajudic­ial executions and give law enforcemen­t agencies a directive on how to treat the enemies.”

“We are seeing the possible beginning of the new Great Terror,” the group said, referring to the purges by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin of the 1930s. “There must be no illusions — the developmen­ts follow a very bad scenario and the slide is rapidly accelerati­ng.”

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