From chriso@lutefisk.demon.co.uk Fri Feb 26 12:01:40 1999
Four Scientology offices in Moscow were raided on Thursday night by
municipal police, the State Security Service and tax police forces,
according to the Russian news agency Interfax. What lies behind this?
According to Reuters, the raid was carried out to check "everything from
tax records to weapons." An unnamed police officer is quoted as saying,
"Any organization can be inspected, any factory, any enterprise. Public
organizations are in a special situation. Many don't pay taxes and get
around customs."
Scientology's well-known creative attitude to taxation may well be an
important factor behind the raid. Tax evasion in Russia has reached
catastrophic proportions. To put this in perspective, the size of the
official economy is now smaller than that of the Netherlands. The black
economy by contrast is booming, with vast quantities of dodgy Russian
money flowing overseas to tax havens such as the Channel Islands and
especially Cyprus. Much of the Russian Government's cashflow problem is
caused by its very low success rate in collecting unpaid taxes. The
Government has made it a high priority to deal with this, and has
embarked on an aggressive campaign to recover monies owed. Scientology
has already run into tax problems - its St Petersburg org was fined
10,000 roubles for tax evasion.
However, the wide scope of the police search and especially the
involvement of the FSB, the Federal Security Service, suggests that
rather more is afoot.
The Federal'naya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti (FSB) is the successor to the KGB.
It was established following the dissolution of the Soviet Union on
December 25th 1991. The old-style KGB had responsibility for an
enormous range of security functions, such as internal security,
counter-espionage, special forces (the spetsnaz) and guarding the USSR's
immensely long border. Although it survives almost intact in certain
other former Soviet republics (such as Belarus and the Central Asian
republics), in Russia it was broken up into a number of successor
organisations of which the FSB is the largest.
Under a new law of April 3rd 1995, the FSB was tasked with general law
enforcement functions - fighting crime and corruption - in addition to
its previous security and counter-intelligence tasks. (This is part of
a worldwide trend - Britain's MI5 was given a similar role around the
same time.) Under this law, it can run its own jails, deploy its agents
under cover of other government agencies, and with court permission,
read people's mail and tap their telephones. It may recruit, protect,
and pay without prosecutorial and judicial oversight informants in
"contracts of confidential cooperation." External supervision (by the
Procurator General and the Duma (Parliament)) is very limited.
The lead FSB agency involved in the Scientology case is almost certainly
the Investigations Directorate. It was reestablished in 1995 to combat
illegal trafficking in weapons and drugs, corruption, and crimes in the
sphere of the economy and organized crime.
However, the FSB has also been used to attack perceived threats to the
Yeltsin/Primakov regime, which is why their involvement in this case is
so significant. The most prominent recent example has been that of
Aleksandr Nikitin, a former naval officer arrested in St Petersburg in
February 1996 and charged with high treason following the publication of
a report by the Bellona environmental group into the horrendous nuclear
pollution caused by the Russian Northern Fleet. The case was thrown out
by the courts. The FSB has regularly targeted other environmental and
human rights activitists, convicting some and raiding others.
Scientology's titular President, Heber C. Jentzsch, is quoted as having
said that the raid is the result of a "campaign by extremist anti-
American, anti-Western Russian officials in collaboration with the
Russian Orthodox Church." Much as I dislike the repulsive Jentzsch, he
may actually be correct. Anti-Americanism in the Russian administration
is certainly running high, particularly in the wake of NATO's formal
enlargement next month and the increasing NATO presence in the Balkans.
The Orthodox Church is extremely powerful and closely connected to the
Russian establishment; it is also very much opposed to a wide range of
"non-traditional" sects and cults which have sprung up in Russia in
recent years, such as Aum Shinryko, Scientology and the Moonies. The
Moscow Patriarchate has played a major role in trying to "educate" the
Russian population about such movements. Elections are coming up in
Russia next year, and bashing an unpopular organisation such as
Scientology *would* be a cheap way of currying favour with the
conservative elements of Russian society.
Scientology's line of attack is clear - according to a statement from
the raided Moscow org, "Actions by the state to repress religious
freedom do not allow Russia to move forward. On the contrary, Russia is
moving backwards to totalitarianism." If past experience is anything to
go by, Scientology will now seek to discover "conspiracies" amongst its
Russian opponents, just as they "proved" that Interpol was run by neo-
Nazis. It will be easier to come up with such theories in Russia than
in some other countries:
* The raid involved the FSB, successor to the KGB.
* The Russian Prime Minister, Yevgeni Primakov, is a former Chairman of the KGB.
* The Russian Orthodox Patriarch, Alexi II, has been exposed as almost
certainly being a key agent of the KGB for nearly 40 years. Files
from the Estonian KGB suggest that he owed his rapid elevation to KGB
patronage in his role as "Agent Weasel". This has been a major news
story in Estonia recently, but has yet to break in Russia.
So it's obvious: the raid on Scientology was provoked by a high-level
conspiracy of KGB-connected figures!
Unfortunately, the state of Russian politics is such that this scenario
cannot entirely be ruled out. What happens next will be the acid test,
however. If criminal charges are brought, we can be pretty sure that
the authorities intend at the least to curtail and possibly to close
down Scientology, as happened in Greece. Otherwise, this may represent
a shot across the bows of the organisation. It will be interesting to
see how each side responds in the next few weeks and months.
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Subject: ANALYSIS: Russia raids Scientology
Date: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 18:01:40 +0000
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