Russian Horror Story
Burnings of schoolgirls and rapings of cats — Russia is experiencing a surge in violence. Is it the new norm or is it just media hype?

A man brandishing a Molotov cocktail broke into Lenin’s mausoleum and nearly set fire to his preserved body. In Leningrad region, a man attempted to rape a 76-year-old woman who lived next door. In Moscow, a policeman shot a colleague. In Perm, a schoolgirl died after being raped and set on fire by schoolmates. In Yekaterinburg, the police are investigating the murder of a six-year-old boy whose foster mother kept his body in the fridge. In Vyshny Volochyok, a man raped a tomcat. In the Moscow metro, a woman broke a turnstile by repeatedly kicking it. In St. Petersburg, a man threw his neighbour out of the window. In Moscow’s Gorky Park, teenagers beat up a passer-by just for fun. A vegetable warehouse guard suspected of raping a teenager was found hiding an armed personnel carrier in his garden. A 13-year-old teenager killed a friend of his… This is a typical selection of recent Russian news.
With the help of a criminologist, a psychologist and statistics from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, we look into whether violence really is on the rise in Russia and whether the war is to blame for it.
“When a country is at war, tensions rise, aggression builds up, and then the crime rate will rise.
But this does not mean that weapons will not eventually start flowing deep into Russia.
Denying domestic violence is the official position of the Russian state.
We must look at the new Russian laws, which effectively approve of violence against those who are different.

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