Police raid migrants’ apartments in Novaya Moskva

Police have reportedly raided migrants’ apartments in Novyye Vatutuinki housing complex in Novaya Moskva (New Moscow). Citing a source within the law enforcement authorities, TASS reported on November 14 that raid was aimed at preventing various violations of the country’s migration legislation. Police officer were reportedly going door-to-door, finding out if local residents have complaints […]

Police have reportedly raided migrants’ apartments in Novyye Vatutuinki housing complex in Novaya Moskva (New Moscow).

Citing a source within the law enforcement authorities, TASS reported on November 14 that raid was aimed at preventing various violations of the country’s migration legislation.

Police officer were reportedly going door-to-door, finding out if local residents have complaints about the safety in the area. 

The raid revealed dozens of violations among foreign citizens, according to TASS.  

Recall, Russian media reports said last month that in the latest step by authorities to fight unlawful immigration following an anti-migrant riot earlier this month, Moscow police chief said on October 20 that Moscow police will raid apartments reportedly occupied by illegal migrants every Friday until the end of the year

The initiative, announced by Moscow police chief Anatoly Yakunin on the order of Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, was promptly condemned by the head of Russia's top migrant organization, who said it would instigate "immigrant phobia" in society.  .

As the government rolls out more anti-migrant measures in reaction to the riot in Moscow's Biryulyovo district, nationalists have stepped up their activities as well, with police preventing more than 120 activists, some armed with baseball bats, from raiding residences of migrants outside Moscow over the weekend.

Yakunin told a City Hall meeting that police will "hold a massive crime-prevention operation code-named 'Signal' on Fridays," RIA Novosti reported.

As part of the operation, city police working jointly with vigilantes, private security guards and other law enforcement organizations will raid apartments where migrants are reported to be living and patrol the streets in search for migrants, Yakunin said.

About 130,000 apartments in Moscow are leased illegally, Sobyanin told the meeting, RIA Novosti reported. All of them will be examined by the year's end, Yakunin said.

Sobyanin asked Yakunin to "reinforce this work."

"Until we know who lives in our houses, until the major part of them are registered, there will always be serious problems with public order," the mayor said.

The new police measures were triggered by a riot of more than a thousand local residents and nationalists last month in Biryulyovo to protest the stabbing death of 25-year-old Yegor Shcherbakov on October 10.  The rioters blamed the killing on a migrant who worked at a local vegetable warehouse.

Police later detained Azeri national Orkhan Zeinalov for the crime, and initially he admitted his guilt but he then rescinded the confession.  Azerabaijan sent Russia two notes of protest over Russian authorities' failure to organize a meeting of Azeri diplomats with Zeinalov, Interfax reported.

Muhammad Amin Madzhumder, head of the Russian Migrants Federation, told The Moscow Times last month that he was "disappointed with the initiative" of police to carry out raids on migrants.

"Recently, our authorities have set a course for immigrant phobia," Madzhumder said.

"Not only the police hold raids, but they take nationalists on them, which is a very dangerous trend," he said, in an apparent reference to the numerous vigilante groups that participate in raids on residences where illegal migrants supposedly live and report them to police and migration officials.

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