Cossack party announces ambition to run in regional polls

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Cossack party announces ambition to run in regional polls

The Presidential Council for Cossack Affairs has approved the plan for the next two years which provides for participation in regional and municipal elections as well as in public security and protection of the state border.

The Cossack Party of the Russian Federation was registered in  January 2013. It is headed by the vice-governor of Southern  Russia’s Rostov Region and lists as its goals the revival and  maintaining of the traditions of Russian Cossacks – the  paramilitary population from the border regions of the Russian  Empire who received benefits from Tsars in exchange for military  service and border protection.

The Presidential Council for Cossack Affairs is a separate body  of leading officials and public activists appointed by the  president to deal with Cossack issues. It approved the plan for  2014 and 2015 and it included cooperation with the Cossack party  and greater involvement of Cossacks in law enforcement and border  protection. For this, the police are being asked to sign  contracts with regional Cossack groups so that paramilitaries  could form patrols together with police officers.

cossack-party-2The approved concept also provides for state assistance to  private security firms registered and manned by Cossacks.

Cossacks will work after natural disasters alongside the Ministry  of Emergency Situations and on environmental protection programs.

The program calls for the setting up of a Cadet Corps – the  Cossack military schools whose graduates officially have  advantages if they choose to enter state military institutes, and  also turn the Moscow State University of Technologies and  Management into the first Cossack University.

The cooperation between Cossacks and the Russian state started  about two years ago across the country and initially was  conducted on the regional level. South Russian regions, like  Rostov and Krasnodar reported some success in their programs but  when Moscow city authorities attempted to introduce  Cossack patrols in November 2012 it was mocked by residents  and their legality was questioned.

The number of registered Cossacks in Russia is estimated at about  750,000 united in several groups. Some 67,000 Cossacks also  insist that they are a separate people according to the 2010  census.

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