World Watch
June 1, 2009 2:12 PM

Sorry, Kids: Russia Says "Be Home By 10"

By
Alexsei Kuznetzov
Topics
World Watch
"It's 10 pm. Are your children home?"

From now on, millions of Russian parents should keep in mind that this is more than just a public service TV ad.

The Russian government has recently made it illegal for minors under the age of 18 to leave their homes between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. without an adult.

(CBS)
So, no more night clubs ... romantic dates under the moon ... or surfing the Web at round-the-clock Internet cafes at night.

A country where 126,000 juveniles were involved in crimes last year hardly needs a reason.

"One can judge a society's maturity and development level from the way it treats its children," said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. "Today, in this country, we simply do not have a proper system for the protection of children. This is what these terrible figures are telling us."

In Communist times, the government kept a close eye on its youngsters. But after the collapse of the Soviet Union, children became one of the most vulnerable and unprotected categories of the country's population.

Minors are often victims of street crime, human trafficking, parental neglect and family violence. Drug use and alcoholism among teenagers have reached shocking levels.

After decades of turning a blind eye, the Russian government has finally acted. It hopes that the new 10 p.m. curfew law will help turn things around.

But some experts claim it is a trademark Soviet solution to a complicated social problem.

"People at the top understand only one measure to resolve the problem — some punishment," said child rights activist Boris Altshuler. "No real professional work. But to forbid, to forbid, is the most popular word for any police state. In this sense, it is police state psychology, police state mentality."

It is unclear how strictly the Russian police will enforce the curfew. Russian teenagers appear to be more confused than worried.

"We cannot even explain it," one girl said.

Russians can travel abroad at the age or 14, get married at 16, and serve in the military at 18. But right up until the day when you can be drafted, you are not allowed to step out of your house after 10 p.m.

So, do Russian teenagers really intend to be home by ten?

"Nyet," one group said.

And if stopped by police, they know exactly what to do: "We'll just pay a bribe," one girl said.

More than that, the curfew law may do more harm than good. If properly enforced, the law will require police to return kids to households with drunken and abusive parents.

But arbitrary enforcement is more likely. The curfew law is expected to become yet another source of illegal income for the notoriously corrupt Russian cops.

Such disrespect for the law, not only among law enforcers but also among ordinary citizens, breeds what President Medvedev has called "legal nihilism."

And, said Altshuler, "This law surely provokes mass nihilism of young people first of all."

On paper the legislation sets out to protect teenagers and make Russia a safer place in which to live. But in reality the law may contribute to raising a generation of Russians who have no respect for legality — something that President Medvedev, a lawyer by training, has claimed to be fighting against.


By CBS News Producer Alexei Kuznetsov reporting from Moscow

Add a Comment See all 27 Comments
by erasmus111 June 2, 2009 2:18 PM EDT
'I' set the curfew in my house. 'I' see to it the curfew is kept. If it isn't my children lost privileges, took on extra chores, were held to stricter standards. I didn't need cops or law to check on my children and see to it they were in the house at night...'I' stayed up and made sure. If one of my children breathed wrong in the night, I knew it and heard it.

Posted by IThoughtItWasFunny at 5:39 AM : Jun 2, 2009

That's the way it should be. But I don't think there are many parents like that anymore. Now they spit them out, but don't live up to their responsibility.

My kids always had a curfew. I always made a point of knowing where they were. And yes, if they breathed wrong in the night, I also knew it.

Parents today don't even set rules. And if they do, they don't follow through with any consequences if they are broken. It's pitiful.
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by barbaram99 June 2, 2009 12:49 PM EDT
I was a minor in Maine and the towns I lived in told us we had to be in our yard/home at 9 pm and we could not leave our home alone. An adult had to be with us after 9 pm. We abided by it. In America children run wild. I did not think any thing of it. It was the the way things were done. Thet may still do it. Newport Maine is one town that did it when I lived there...I live in Seattle now
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by Lizzz33333 June 2, 2009 12:25 PM EDT
I am sorry but I don't agree with most of the comments posted. I was on the HS Poms squad and stayed out past 10pm to perform at football and basket ball games. I was also in HS Theatre too. During rehearsal weeks right before opening and during the run of shows I was out past 10pm also, usually ending at 11:30pm. Actually me and my sister never had curfews. Our parents wrath was enough to scare us into not doing anything stupid while we were out, AND to be home at a time that was not 3 am in the morning. I was more scared of my parents wrath then any fear of peer pressure by a friend I could have faced. And when our friends met our parents, they knew it too. It's the parents job, not the polices.
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by gohan31 June 2, 2009 11:54 AM EDT
The police don't love your children, no matter where you live. Instead of "policing" children guide them through this world. Give them exploratory adventures in the country of your land. Provoke not your children to anger, lest they turn against your way of life and you! Children are a nations greatest resource period!
Reply to this comment
by ajjaxtheleast June 2, 2009 9:56 AM EDT
The OVERWHELMING majority of American kids
are in their homes by 10 at night.

And THEIR safety is motivating the "curfew"
not the safety of others that'd be threatened
by the kids being out at night.

A statement not to be proved or disproved
by tickling a few keyboard keys.

Get off your duffs and at 10-oclock or later tonight
take a 5 to ten-block stroll around your
neighborhood.

After which I'll accept your assesment of the
stroll around your neighborhood as an honest
recounting of those who are, or who are not, out
after 10-oclock at night in your neighborhood,,,
even if it's only relayed by word of mouth
from the attending paramedic.
Reply to this comment
by Slrman-21001573651763300012869 June 2, 2009 9:33 AM EDT
mrs_trepidatious Did Christ say your children had to be home by a certain hour? Or are you just using that as an excuse to enforce your will upon your children? Because that's what religion is for, I am sure it is the latter.

I'm sure that, when your children reach 18, they will run from such an oppressive and stupid regime. Enjoy your lonely old age when your children will have nothing to do with you because of the way you treated them/
Reply to this comment
by andylance1 June 2, 2009 9:10 AM EDT
But in reality the law may contribute to raising a generation of Russians who have no respect for legality ?

Sounds just like America where few respect our drug laws or not being allowed to drink until you are 21.

Mad mothers and state legislatures against teenagers
Reply to this comment
by mrs_trepidatious June 2, 2009 8:49 AM EDT
My children are home by 8pm because I run a good Christian home.
Reply to this comment
by clancy49 June 2, 2009 8:17 AM EDT
My children are grown and thirty now, but when they were teenagers I actually had to set up a burglar alarm in the house to stop them from leaving in the middle of the night with their friends and roaming the streets of a major metropolitan city. It worked some of the time, but it didn't actually stop with the children until a local cop caught them, put them in the back seat of a squad car, told them about the dangers of the night, threatened to take them to jail, and brought mine home to me. That worked. That one child never again snuck out of the house at night. The eldest never did anything like that, she was too afraid of me. The middle child always did and to this day has a drug, alcohol, party, image problem. The young people may protest but now I have sixteen year old grandchildren and I think what the Russians are doing is right. My grandkids are with groups into drugs, sex, and alcohol. Yes, I 'll say it why most parents and grandparents deny it. The facts are there. The US should put such restrictions into force. Crime will show a decline. The children would also grow up more responsible.
Reply to this comment
by rhs648 June 2, 2009 1:52 AM EDT
correction

When my children were young, our town had a ten o'clock curfew until the authorities decided that it would not hold up in court. It was a great tool for my wife and I. We told our children that if they weren't home before ten o'clock and the police picked them up, they could stay in jail overnight. We never had an issue with the curfew and we knew where our children were after ten at night. After the curfew was thrown out, our town began to see increased drug dealing, vandalism, and serious crime. I would support any curfew which requires children to be home after ten in the evening.
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