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[In training for deployment to the Balkans.]


The Baltic Times
August 9 - 15 , 2001

Peacekeepers terrorize local Russians  


By Aleksei Gunter, TALLINN

Dozens of soldiers from the Estonian Peacekeepers
Operations Center in Paldiski were allegedly involved
in a number of violent rows with locals at the end of
July. If an internal investigation launched on July 24
confirms the charges, up to 30 peacekeepers, who are
at the center to train for NATO missions abroad, will
be dismissed. 

Captain Peeter Mitt, the center's commander, confirmed
that a number of Paldiki residents called the center
several times during the evening of July 23
complaining that peacekeepers were beating people up.

The police department of Harju county, where Paldiski
is located 50 kilometers to the west of Tallinn, also
received calls from the townsfolk and sent a patrol
car to the town. The policemen reported that
everything was quiet.

Paldiski does not have its own police station, and
this is generally seen as the main reason why the
assaults occurred, said Kaupo Kallas, the town's
mayor.

"We have two police officer posts, and one of these is
currently vacant due to a lack of interest from
possible candidates," said Kallas.

But it is becoming clear that the main reason for the
assaults is one of ethnicity in a town that was
formerly a closed Soviet military base dominated by
Russian speakers. 

Andrei Krutikov, 23, was going by bicycle to meet his
friend working at a baker's shop when a crowd of about
20 young men barred his way, stopped him and asked if
he spoke Estonian.

The modest answer, "Yes, I do speak it, but just a
little," became crucial for Krutikov. He was seriously
beaten and kicked and had to spend a week off work.

Krutikov told the Postimees daily that the gang were
peacekeepers from the local training center looking
for some local youngsters who stole a mobile phone and
a wallet from one of the soldiers earlier in the
evening. He added that he was sure he was beaten
simply because he did not speak the state language
fluently. He also said that he was not the first
victim of the "violent peacekeepers."

"I was beaten like several other innocent people in
the town, even including a couple of women," he said.

Krutikov said there would be no use writing a
complaint to the police because it was dark and he
would not recognize any of the offenders.

On the same evening, July 23, the peacekeepers also
paid a visit to the Sadko Bar. Owner Galina Maljutina
has sent a bill for broken furniture and smashed
dishes to the Peacekeepers Operations Center.

According to Maljutina, the soldiers visited the bar
looking for a fight by asking clientele if they spoke
Estonian. Those who did not were beaten.

The bar, located next to St. Nicholas Church in an old
and unrenovated house, is a popular spot in town
despite the jerry-built interior and post-Soviet
standards of service.

According to unconfirmed information, a young woman
who witnessed the incident lost her breast milk due to
psychological shock.

Irina, owner of the small Vaike-Paala store about 100
meters from the bar, confirmed that peacekeepers were
loose in the town that evening. They also terrified
visitors in the shop by asking if they spoke Estonian.

According to Harju County's police department, none of
Paldiski's residents have written complaints about the
soldiers. On the contrary, some of the peacekeepers
have kicked up a fuss about assaults from local
youngsters who supposedly offended and beat them a
week before.

The police, however, have already solved several cases
regarding the offended peacekeepers, and stated on
Aug. 6 that in all three cases the soldiers were
drunk.

Speaking of another, older case, police reported that
even the Peacekeepers Operations Center's priest who
was assaulted and robbed last December was drunk
during the assault.

Peeter Tali, a spokesman for the Estonian Defense
Forces tried to point out last week that the violent
spirit of the peacekeepers was a reaction to the
offensive attitude of local people toward the
soldiers.

The case revealed and reported by Postimees became a
tidbit for Russia's Foreign Office, which did not fail
to accuse Estonia generally of anti-Russian attitudes.

In a statement full of explicit expressions and
composed according to the best traditions of political
propaganda, Russian Foreign Ministry chief spokesman
Aleksander Yakovenko blamed the soldiers for behaving
like "fascist-minded hooligans" even though as
peacekeepers they should be especially well aware of
the dangers of national extremism.

"These incidents would remain a routine case for the
police chronicles if the witnesses had not reported
that the soldiers beat only Russian-speakers and only
because of their poor command of Estonian," wrote
Yakovenko on Aug. 1.



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