Pubdate: Sun, 05 Mar 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: PATRICK E. TYLER, New York Times GROUP FIGHTS DRUG PLAGUE WITH VIOLENCE Vigilantes Allege Russia Needs Bitter Medicine YEKATERINBURG, Russia -- Igor Varov, wearing a pistol on his hip, opens the sun roof of his big Mercedes 600 to remove the illegal flashing light he uses to maneuver through traffic on the icy streets of this industrial city in the Ural Mountains. He and his colleague, Andrei Kabanov, are on the prowl in a poor neighborhood where the heroin addicts are out at dusk searching for dealers in the snowy courtyards and darkened stairwells. ``Look, there's some addicts,'' he says, as the silver sedan swings into an alley next to a dilapidated apartment block. Two teenage boys eye their arrival warily. Varov and Kabanov jump out and start barking orders in almost one voice. ``Get over here! Show me your arms. Tell me where they are selling drugs, and don't lie.'' Varov is unfazed by protests from the teenagers -- one is visibly shaking -- that they are not addicts and do not know where drugs are being sold. Two other young men approach, believing that they have also been summoned by Kabonov's repeated shouts to ``get over here!'' But now Varov wheels toward them. ``What are you doing here? Get out of here or I will break your legs.'' Here at the crossroads of Asia and Europe, where the supply lines of opium and heroin out of Central and South Asia run into big population centers near the frontier of the drug trade, a group of tough guys have organized themselves as a foundation called City Without Drugs. They are leading a brutal civic campaign to take the streets of Yekaterinburg back from the drug dealers and the corrupt police who are widely believed to be protecting them. ``We call ourselves the angered public,'' said Varov, 36, who runs a construction-materials company. ``And we are doing this for people who want to be rid of these drug dealers. We go to these drug-selling sites with baseball bats and flashlights and find out where the drug dealers are and beat them like wild dogs.'' In the lawless vacuum that afflicts much of Russia today, Varov and Kabanov regularly incite acts of vigilante violence against alleged drug dealers. They have also founded a ``drug-treatment center'' where addicts are forced to withdraw from heroin use cold turkey while handcuffed to their beds -- or sometimes just to the nearest radiator. They, and a loose knit band of business associates, are a sign of the jarring social transition under way in many parts of this country, where vigilante violence and paramilitary organizations have assumed a greater role in policing and guarding Russian business owners and ordinary citizens. In the process, they often intimidate and extort money from people who get in their way. They are up-from-nowhere street toughs, gang leaders or sportsmen who in the last decade have muscled their way into one business or another. As their power and wealth have grown, they have embraced religion or taken up public causes. In some cases this was genuine, but in others it was a means to clean up their image and wrap themselves in the mantle of public-spiritedness while staving off prosecutions. ``We are all for killing drug dealers on the spot without trial because they are poisoning our children,'' said Kabanov, 40, a onetime professional card player and former heroin addict himself, who built a yacht club for the nouveaux riches of this region. He dresses in a natty black outfit and has a stubble of red beard that enhances his roguish presentation. He and Varov have decided that the heroin plague that is sweeping across Russia is a conspiracy by Muslim nations and Chechen warlords to lay low their motherland. ``No one wants a strong Russia,'' Varov said, ``including America.'' There is no dispute about the problem they confront. The opening of borders and of formerly closed cities in Russia, along with the collapse of the Soviet-era economy, ignited a wave of illicit trade in everything for which there is a market in the world: weapons, drugs, prostitutes. In the space of less than a decade, the number of heroin addicts here increased from a few dozen to an estimated 60,000 to 80,000. Drug addiction across the country is expected to reach 3 million victims in Russia this year. That is well behind the United States, where there are an estimated 12 million drug users, but the rate of growth in Russia is phenomenal. In the first half of 1999, heroin use in Russia was up 4.5 times compared with the same period in 1998. And the number of HIV infections, many of them from shared needles, doubled in 1999, according to an Interior Ministry report issued in November. ``This is one of the most serious problems facing the country because it could take away an entire generation of Russians,'' said Boris M. Tepliakov, a psychiatrist and the head of the state-run hospital here that treats drug addicts. The loss of government control, or feckless enforcement by the central and regional law enforcement authorities, has given rise to the spread of gangs and private security groups that assert their own authority. On some days, it is difficult to sort out the criminals from the non-criminals. Varov and his associates say they stepped into the vacuum last summer, when the law enforcement authorities were either overwhelmed or unwilling to act. They teamed up with another business syndicate here called Uralmash, and together they sent several hundred security guards from their various enterprises to the Gypsy Village neighborhood that serves as the center of the drug trade in the city. The security guards beat some alleged drug dealers and went to the homes of others, threatening to burn them down if drug dealing did not stop. Not long after, Uralmash security guards who patrol an open-air market on the other side of town seized a drug-dealing suspect. They tied him to a tree, hung a sign on him saying he was poisoning the city's youth, pulled his pants down and jabbed old hypodermic needles into his hindquarters while a video crew was summoned from a local television station. A senior police official, Fedor Anikeyev, said he had received ``unofficial'' reports of vigilantism. The police were powerless to act unless one of the beating victims walked into the police station to swear out a complaint, which was not likely, he said, because that would only subject him to further threats and beatings. By all accounts, the anti-drug crusade has significant public support -- although it is impossible to measure -- from citizens who are struggling in an economy of high unemployment, industrial contraction and cynicism toward anyone who claims to be working for the public good. Mothers of drug-ravaged teenagers have staged rallies and organized drug patrols in courtyards and apartment building stairwells. An electronic pager system set up by City Without Drugs to enable the public to inform on drug dealers has received more than 6,000 calls since last fall. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart