Wrecking (Soviet crime)
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- For other uses, see Wrecking (disambiguation)
Wrecking, or vreditel'stvo (вредительство), was a crime specified in the criminal code of the Soviet Union in the Stalin era.
It is often translated as "sabotage"; however "wrecking" and "diversionist acts" and "counter-revolutionary sabotage" were distinct sub-articles of Article 58 (RSFSR Penal Code) (58-7, 58-9, and 58-14 respectively), and the meaning of "wrecking" is closer to "undermining".
These three categories are distinguished in the following way.
- Diversions are acts of immediate infliction of physical damage on state and cooperative property.
- Wrecking are deliberate acts aimed against normal functioning of state and cooperative organisations, e.g., giving deliberately wrong commands.
- Sabotage was non-execution or careless execution of one's duties.
Many of the victims of the Great Purge were charged with wrecking. The term is mentioned and described in Alexander Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago.
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