In the past two years, crime rates have grown in
Ukraine. Factors contributing to the general criminalization of society include
economic decline and war
According to
the consolidated data of the General Prosecutor's Office, in 2013 police
recorded 13,776 major crimes. In 2015, this figure was around 21,500. In the
first six months of 2016, it amounted to almost 12,000. If the trend continues,
this number will be even greater. Specifically, in the last two years the
number of murders, robberies, especially with the use of firearms, burglaries
and carjacks has increased dramatically. While in 2013 17,000 cases of burglary
were recorded, in 2015 this figure reached almost 22,000.
Carjacking is the
second most popular crime. Over the past two years, the number of carjacks
increased from 3,800 to 6,900. The number of homicides also grew, from 5,900 to
8,200.
"The overall crime rate is growing, I
agree. Unfortunately, there are objective reasons for this," says Khatia
Dekanoidze, Head of the National Police. "First of all, the economic
situation in the country has been deteriorating since 2012, and this is always
accompanied by an increase in crime. Once the living standards start declining,
crime rates start rising, especially as far as property crimes are concerned.
Secondly, the war has been going on since 2014, contributing to the spread of
organized crime and an increase in illegal arms trafficking. Thirdly, the
number of crimes should not be concealed to improve statistics, and we are now
taking the appropriate measures to that end."
The latter argument was taken on board by the
officials stating that previously many crimes were concealed, while now they
are being honest and open. That creates an impression that there was a sharp
spike. "In 2016, half the number of cases was finalized compared to 2015.
My priority is not to show good statistics. It is important to show people that
there is a problem, a case has been filed and the police are taking care of it.
Of course, the crime clearance rate has also decreased, but this is due to many
factors," Dekanoidze said. At the same time, she mentioned the successful
work of the police to curb illicit arms trafficking and combat organized crime.
The reasons of such dynamics are obvious: the war in
Donbas and economic crisis. However, the crisis began to manifest itself long
before the Maidan events, and was accompanied by a rise in crime. "The
crime rate started growing in 2013, not now, in the last six months, not after
the National Police was established. In fact, crime rate has been on the rise
since 2012. It's just that in the last year and a half it became more obvious,"
Dekanoidze reiterated.
The level of crime detection has declined, according
to the Interior Ministry, after the agency gave up on improving statistics on
paper. Nevertheless, over the past two turbulent years, the war played a
decisive role in the rise of crime. First of all, it supplied a huge number of
weapons to the black market, making it easy for most criminals to procure
firearms. As The Ukrainian
Week found out,
today a standard Makarov gun can easily be bought in Kyiv for $300–400. And the
closer you are to the ATO area, the cheaper and easier it is to get weapons,
not only guns, but also assault rifles, grenades, grenade launchers, and
machine guns. All these weapons have already started to "speak."
According to both the Interior Ministry and the independent experts, today 3–4
million illegal weapon pieces are circulating in the country.
The second factor, according to criminologist Anna
Malyar, which is not discussed publicly for the sake of political correctness,
is the forced migrants from Donbas, of whom there are now more than 1.5 million
across the Ukrainian territory, according to the most conservative estimates.
Obviously, not all these people were successful in starting a new life,
especially in the circumstances where the state almost abandoned them to their
own fate, providing a rather conventional assistance. It is not surprising,
therefore, that many of them willingly or unwillingly chose the path of crime
and started to earn money by committing offenses.
Another issue, which the MIA does not like to discuss,
is the professional competency of its employees. For the past two years, this
agency has been undergoing constant lustrations, certifications, reforms, etc.
Of course, they are necessary, but all of this has a very negative impact on
the ability of the law enforcement officers to perform their functions. The Ukrainian Week has already written more than once
that the smokescreen of the new patrol police is simply hiding the unreformed
investigative and operational staff, which is arguably the most important part
of the MIA apparatus. Roughly speaking, these are those who are supposed to
find out about a crime, to investigate it, to apprehend criminals, and to prove
their guilt in court.
Today we have a situation where the investigative and
operational units have for the most part avoided the lustration and
re-certification processes. However, many professionals who still worked for
the agency have left without waiting for the checks, also because on the wave
of hatred towards the police after the Maidan events, all their financial
bonuses and awards were cut down, leaving them with their modest salaries. This
caused the outflow of a considerable number of law enforcement employees.
Yet another factor that should not be forgotten is the
controversial "Savchenko's bill," whereby one day spent by a
defendant in SIZO, the pre-trial detention center, equals two days in prison.
The law was sponsored by Batkivshchyna, initiated by Nadia Savchenko and
supported by many human rights activists as a tool to speed up pre-trial consideration
of cases. It came into force on December 24, 2015, and has since been applied
to about 40,000 people. Now, police, lawyers, Justice Ministry and many human
rights activists are unanimous in stating that many people convicted for grave
offenses walk free as a result of it.
The effect of the economic crisis is self-explanatory:
over the last two years, Ukrainians have become noticeably poorer. The
unemployment rate grew significantly, many people have been thrown idle and
know no other ways of earning their bread beside crime. Add to this the
workforce clusters in major cities, which further increase the risk of
offenses.
Experts say that Ukrainian society is now approaching
the crime levels of the 1990s. The problem here is not so much the crime rate, as
the return to criminal behaviors which, on the one hand, pushes the
disadvantaged segments of the population to the path of crime and, on the
other, creates public distrust in the government's ability to protect ordinary
citizens. Such things create lasting negative results that we all had a chance
to witness in Donbas, which was the heart of the so-called black demographic
zone, that is, the region with consistently high rates of crime, mortality and
diseases like HIV/AIDS or Hepatitis C. Now, the entire territory of the country
could become such a zone.
The situation in Ukraine is very typical of all
countries that enter such turbulence – such as Croatia in the 1990s. It also
faced an orgy of lawlessness and criminalization of society in the country. Solutions
to this are trivial and obvious: increased efficiency of law enforcement
agencies through reform, staff turnover, and wage hike; stabilization of the
economic situation, which allows an increasingly large part of the population
to earn daily bread with normal, legitimate work.
Another way to normalize the situation is to solve the
issue of the huge number of illegal weapons in circulation. Many experts
suggest using the Moldovan experience, where the same problem arose 20 years
ago following the military conflict in Transnistria. The solution was to adopt
the law allowing civilian firearm possession. It was supposed to encourage
respectable citizens who had bought weapons for self-defense to register them
with the police, because criminals have them anyway.
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