Russian convicts prop up arms industry


Amid sparks, burning smells and the screech of metal on metal, the inmates of Prison Colony Number 13 in the town of Nizhny Tagil are hard at work.


The use of convict labour on the arms production line is just a revival of a past practice

They are not military planners, scheming politicians or terrorists.

They are prisoners and they build tanks for Russia's booming arms industry.

Under a contract between the prison and the local tank factory, the 80 convicts are making parts for Russia's T-90s main battle tank.


It is the flagship export of Russia's arms industry and more than 300 of them are being made for India.

With Moscow's arms sales on the up - $4.2bn worth of exports in 2001 - the tanks produced with the help of the prisoners in the Urals region could end up not just in India, but in the armies of many other countries of the world.

Prisoners' pride

Alexander Dorienko has been in prison for seven years, with one year to go on a sentence for armed robbery.

Now he is the senior worker on the tank part production line. During his compulsory military service, he drove tanks for the Russian army then posted in East Germany.

Alexander Dorienko at machine
Dorienko: "We're proud 100% of our tanks"

For him, there is no shame in being in prison and helping to make heavy weaponry.

"We're proud 100% of our tanks, proud that we help make them and that they're the best in Russia, and in the whole world. A tank is the face of Russia."

Historically, the Urals region, around 1,660 kilometres (1,000 miles) east of Moscow, has been the centre of the armament industry.

Many of the factories in Nizhny Tagil date back to the 18th Century and the time of Tsar Peter the Great, the days of muskets and cannon balls.

And the use of convict labour on the arms production line is just a revival of a past practice.

In the dark days of World War II and the age of Stalin, prisoners were always employed to do the dirty work of the defence industry.


Everyone should work for the prosperity of his country and for its defence capability

Captain Alexander Kuchin

Even the inventors and designers of some of the deadliest weapons in history worked under supervision in Urals prison camps.

"It's our historical work in this region and now it's happening here in the prison too. I don't think there's anything unnatural about that," says Captain Alexander Kuchin, head of production at Colony Number 13.

"I'm glad for the prisoners. Everyone should work for the prosperity of his country and for its defence capability, so it's normal."

So, since 2000, the country's main tank factory, Uralvagonzavod, has been employing 80 of the 1,800 prisoners to make parts for the caterpillar tracks of the T-90s.

Cost-cutting

The economics of this make a lot of sense.

Prisoners are not paid anywhere near the salaries of qualified defence workers in the West. So the prices for Russia's tanks are extremely competitive.

According to Ruslan Pukhov, a Moscow-based arms industry analyst, the Russian T-90s will cost a potential client $1.8m.

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