The position of Commissioner for Children’s Rights in Russia was established in 2009 by the decree of then-president Dmitry Medvedev. The children’s ombudsperson’s task is to protect children’s rights and independently monitor the activities of state bodies.
The first defender of all Russian children was Pavel Astakhov, a popular Russian lawyer. He stepped down from that position in 2016, in the wake of the tragedy at Lake Syamozero, where 14 children were killed in a poorly organised water camping trip. Arriving at the hospital to see the survivors, the first thing Astakhov asked was: “Well, how was the swim?” He could not get away with this cynicism.
Astakhov was soon replaced by Anna Kuznetsova from the town of Penza, a children’s commissioner who was also a philanthropist, a priest’s wife, and a mother of many children. During her five years in office, she gave birth to her sixth child and launched several memorable initiatives: she demanded that a children’s rhyme about the flu be banned because it referred to “white powder” and suggested that the ruling United Russia party’s logo be changed, adding a family to the lonely bear.
Created as an alternative to “terrible” juvenile justice, the institution of the children’s rights commissioner in Russia has essentially become an extension of the state apparatus to influence the younger generation, but by no means a protection from it. While juvenile justice implies the intervention of a body independent from the state that stands guard over children’s rights in every situation, the Russian children’s rights commissioners fundamentally avoid conflict with the authorities, legitimising any form of state violence against children with the hands of caring people with kind faces.