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Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation leadership. Leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia

,
ministry manager
(1754-1831)

August 29 April 19 Zakrevsky, Arseniy Andreevich
(1783-1865)
April 19 November 19 Bludov, Dmitry Nikolaevich
(1785-1864)
12th of February February, 15 Stroganov, Alexander Grigorievich
ministry manager
(1795-1891)
10th of March 23 September Perovsky, Lev Alekseevich
(1792-1856)
23 September August 30 Bibikov, Dmitry Gavrilovich
(1792-1870)
August 30 August 20 Lanskoy, Sergei Stepanovich
(1787-1862)
August 20 April 23 Valuev, Pyotr Alexandrovich
(1815-1890)
April 23 9th of March Timashev, Alexander Egorovich
(1818-1893)
9th of March November 27 Makov, Lev Savvich
(1830-1883)
November 27 August 6 Loris-Melikov, Mikhail Tarielovich
(1825-1888)
August 6 May 4th Ignatiev, Nikolai Pavlovich
(1832-1908)
May 4th May 30 Tolstoy, Dmitry Andreevich
(1823-1889)
May 30 25th of April Durnovo, Ivan Nikolaevich
(1834-1903)
25th of April October 15 Goremykin, Ivan Logginovich
(1839-1917)
October 15 The 20th of October Sipyagin, Dmitry Sergeevich
until February 26 -
ministry manager
(1853-1902)
The 20th of October April 2 Pleve, Vyacheslav Konstantinovich
(1846-1904)
April, 4 July 15 Svyatopolk-Mirsky, Pyotr Dmitrievich
(1857-1914)
August, 26th January 18 Bulygin, Alexander Grigorievich
(1851-1919)
January 20th 22 of October Durnovo, Pyotr Nikolaevich
(1845-1915)
22 of October April 22 Stolypin, Pyotr Arkadievich
(1862-1911)
26 April September 5 Makarov, Alexander Alexandrovich
(1857-1919)
September 20 December 16 Maklakov, Nikolai Alekseevich
(1871-1918)
December 16 June 5 Shcherbatov, Nikolai Borisovich
(1868-1943)
June 5 September 26 Khvostov, Alexey Nikolaevich
(1872-1918)
September 26 March, 3rd Shturmer, Boris Vladimirovich
(1848-1917)
March, 3rd July 7 Khvostov, Alexander Alekseevich
(1857-1922)
July 7 16 of September Protopopov, Alexander Dmitrievich
(1866-1918)
16 of September March 13

Ministers of the Interior of the Provisional Government

Name Appointment to the post Resignation from office
Lvov, Georgy Evgenievich
(1861-1925)
March 15th July 20
Tsereteli, Irakli Georgievich
(1881-1959)
July 23 August 6
Avksentiev, Nikolai Dmitrievich
(1878-1943)
August 7 September 15th
Nikitin, Alexey Maksimovich
(1876-1939)
September 15th November 7

white movement

Name Appointment to the post Resignation from office
Hattenberger, Alexander Nikolaevich
(1861-1939)
November 7 April 29
Pepelyaev, Viktor Nikolaevich
(1885-1920)
1st of May November 22
Cherven-Vodali, Alexander Alexandrovich
(1872-1920)
November 22 4 January

People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs of the RSFSR

Name Appointment to the post Resignation from office
Rykov, Alexei Ivanovich
(1881-1938)
November 8 November 17
Petrovsky, Grigory Ivanovich
(1878-1958)
November 17 30th of March
Dzerzhinsky, Felix Edmundovich
(1877-1926)
30th of March July 6
Beloborodov, Alexander Georgievich
(1891-1938)
August 30 December 3
Tolmachev, Vladimir Nikolaevich
(1887-1937)
January 2 December 15

NKVD (MVD) of the USSR

Name Appointment to the post Resignation from office
Yagoda, Genrikh Grigorievich
(1891-1938)
July 10 September 25
Ezhov, Nikolai Ivanovich
(1895-1940)
September 26 November 24
Beria, Lavrenty Pavlovich
(1899-1953)
November 25 December 30th
Kruglov, Sergei Nikiforovich
(1907-1977)
January 10 5th of March
Beria, Lavrenty Pavlovich
(1899-1953)
March 15th June 26
Kruglov, Sergei Nikiforovich
(1907-1977)
June 26 January 31
Dudorov, Nikolai Pavlovich
(1906-1977)
March 23 13th of January

MBVD RSFSR-RF

Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation

Name
Appointment to the post
Resignation from office
Erin, Viktor Fyodorovich
(b. 1944)
January 15
30 June
Kulikov, Anatoly Sergeevich
(b. 1946)
July 7
March 23
Maslov, Pavel Tikhonovich, and. O.
(b. 1946)
March 23 30th of March
Stepashin, Sergei Vadimovich
(b. 1952)
And about. 30th of March
April 28
April 28
12 May
Vasiliev, Vladimir Abdualievich
And. O.
(b. 1949)
12 May
May 21st
Rushailo, Vladimir Borisovich
(b. 1953)
May 21st March 28
Gryzlov, Boris Vyacheslavovich
(b. 1950)
March 28 December 24
Nurgaliev, Rashid Gumarovich
(b. 1956)
And about. December 24
9th of March
9th of March
May 21st
Kolokoltsev, Vladimir Alexandrovich
(b. 1961)
from May 21 Until now

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Notes

Links

  • on the official website of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation

An excerpt characterizing the List of Ministers of Internal Affairs of Russia

He touched the horse and, having called the head of the column Miloradovich to him, gave him the order to advance.
The army stirred again, and two battalions of the Novgorod regiment and a battalion of the Apsheron regiment moved forward past the sovereign.
While this Apsheron battalion, ruddy Miloradovich, without an overcoat, in a uniform and orders and with a hat with a huge sultan, put on sideways and from the field, was passing, the march galloped forward and, valiantly saluting, reined in the horse in front of the sovereign.
“God bless you, general,” the emperor told him.
- Ma foi, sire, nous ferons ce que qui sera dans notre possibilite, sire, [Really, your majesty, we will do what it will be possible for us to do, your majesty,] - he answered cheerfully, nevertheless causing a mocking smile from the gentlemen retinue of the sovereign with his bad French accent.
Miloradovich abruptly turned his horse and stood somewhat behind the sovereign. The Absheronians, excited by the presence of the sovereign, valiantly, briskly beating off their feet, passed by the emperors and their retinues.
- Guys! - Miloradovich shouted in a loud, self-confident and cheerful voice, apparently excited to such an extent by the sounds of shooting, the expectation of battle and the sight of the fine fellows of the Apsheron, still their Suvorov comrades, briskly passing by the emperors, that he forgot about the presence of the sovereign. - Guys, you do not take the first village! he shouted.
- Glad to try! the soldiers shouted.
The sovereign's horse shied away from an unexpected cry. This horse, which had carried the sovereign at reviews in Russia, here, on the Field of Austerlitz, carried its rider, withstanding his scattered blows with his left foot, alerted his ears to the sounds of shots, just as she did it on the Field of Mars, not understanding the meaning of any these heard shots, nor the neighborhood of the black stallion of Emperor Franz, nor everything that the one who rode it said, thought, felt that day.
The sovereign turned to one of his entourage with a smile, pointing to the fellow Absherons, and said something to him.

Kutuzov, accompanied by his adjutants, rode at a pace behind the carabinieri.
Having traveled half a verst at the tail of the column, he stopped at a lonely abandoned house (probably a former tavern) near the fork of two roads. Both roads descended downhill, and troops marched along both.
The fog began to disperse, and indefinitely, at a distance of two versts, enemy troops could already be seen on opposite hills. To the left below the shooting became more audible. Kutuzov stopped talking to the Austrian general. Prince Andrei, standing somewhat behind, peered at them and, wanting to ask the adjutant for a telescope, turned to him.
“Look, look,” this adjutant said, looking not at the distant army, but down the mountain in front of him. - They're French!
Two generals and adjutants began to grab the pipe, pulling it out one from the other. All the faces suddenly changed, and horror was expressed on everyone. The French were supposed to be two miles away from us, but they appeared suddenly, unexpectedly in front of us.
- Is this an enemy? ... No! ... Yes, look, he ... probably ... What is this? voices were heard.
Prince Andrey with a simple eye saw a dense column of French rising to the right towards the Apsheronians, no further than five hundred paces from the place where Kutuzov was standing.
“Here it is, the decisive moment has come! It came to me, ”thought Prince Andrei, and hitting his horse, drove up to Kutuzov. “We must stop the Apsheronians,” he shouted, “your excellency!” But at the same moment, everything was covered in smoke, close-range shooting was heard, and a naively frightened voice, two steps away from Prince Andrei, shouted: “Well, brothers, the Sabbath!” And as if this voice was a command. At this voice, everything rushed to run.
Mixed, ever-increasing crowds fled back to the place where five minutes ago the troops passed by the emperors. It was not only difficult to stop this crowd, but it was impossible not to move back together with the crowd.
Bolkonsky only tried to keep up with her and looked around, perplexed and unable to understand what was happening in front of him. Nesvitsky, with an angry look, red and not like himself, shouted to Kutuzov that if he did not leave now, he would probably be taken prisoner. Kutuzov stood in the same place and, without answering, took out his handkerchief. Blood was flowing from his cheek. Prince Andrei pushed his way up to him.
- Are you injured? he asked, barely able to control the trembling of his lower jaw.
- The wounds are not here, but where! - said Kutuzov, pressing a handkerchief to his wounded cheek and pointing to the fugitives. - Stop them! he shouted, and at the same time, probably convinced that it was impossible to stop them, he hit his horse and rode to the right.
The crowd of fugitives, again surging, took him with them and dragged him back.
The troops fled in such a dense crowd that, once they got into the middle of the crowd, it was difficult to get out of it. Who shouted: “Go! what's the delay?" Who immediately, turning around, fired into the air; who beat the horse on which Kutuzov himself rode. With the greatest effort, getting out of the stream of the crowd to the left, Kutuzov with a retinue, reduced by more than half, went to the sounds of nearby gun shots. Getting out of the crowd of fleeing, Prince Andrei, trying to keep up with Kutuzov, saw on the slope of the mountain, in the smoke, a Russian battery still firing and the French running up to it. The Russian infantry stood higher, moving neither forward to help the battery, nor backward in the same direction as the fugitives. The general on horseback separated from this infantry and rode up to Kutuzov. Only four people remained from Kutuzov's retinue. Everyone was pale and looked at each other silently.
- Stop those bastards! - panting, said Kutuzov to the regimental commander, pointing to the fugitives; but at the same moment, as if in punishment for these words, like a swarm of birds, bullets whistled over the regiment and Kutuzov's retinue.
The French attacked the battery and, seeing Kutuzov, fired at him. With this volley, the regimental commander grabbed his leg; several soldiers fell, and the ensign, who was standing with the banner, let go of it; the banner staggered and fell, lingering on the guns of neighboring soldiers.
Soldiers without a command began to shoot.
- Oooh! Kutuzov mumbled with an expression of despair and looked around. “Bolkonsky,” he whispered in a voice trembling from the consciousness of his senile impotence. “Bolkonsky,” he whispered, pointing to the disorganized battalion and the enemy, “what is this?
But before he finished these words, Prince Andrei, feeling tears of shame and anger rising to his throat, was already jumping off his horse and running to the banner.
- Guys, go ahead! he shouted childishly.
"Here it is!" thought Prince Andrei, grabbing the staff of the banner and listening with pleasure to the whistle of bullets, obviously directed precisely against him. Several soldiers fell.
- Hooray! - shouted Prince Andrei, barely holding the heavy banner in his hands, and ran forward with undoubted confidence that the whole battalion would run after him.
Indeed, he ran only a few paces alone. One, another soldier set off, and the whole battalion shouted "Hurrah!" ran ahead and overtook him. The non-commissioned officer of the battalion, running up, took the banner that wavered from the weight in the hands of Prince Andrei, but was immediately killed. Prince Andrei again grabbed the banner and, dragging it by the shaft, fled with the battalion. In front of him, he saw our gunners, some of whom were fighting, others were throwing their cannons and running towards him; he also saw French infantry soldiers seizing artillery horses and turning the cannons. Prince Andrei with the battalion was already 20 paces from the guns. He heard the unceasing whistle of bullets above him, and the soldiers to the right and left of him ceaselessly groaned and fell. But he did not look at them; he peered only at what was happening in front of him - on the battery. He clearly saw already one figure of a red-haired artilleryman with a shako knocked to one side, pulling a bannik from one side, while a French soldier was pulling a bannik towards him from the other side. Prince Andrei already saw the clearly bewildered and at the same time embittered expression on the faces of these two people, who apparently did not understand what they were doing.
"What are they doing? - thought Prince Andrei, looking at them: - why does not the red-haired artilleryman run when he has no weapons? Why doesn't the Frenchman prick him? Before he has time to run, the Frenchman will remember the gun and stab him.”
Indeed, another Frenchman, with a gun overweight, ran up to the fighters, and the fate of the red-haired artilleryman, who still did not understand what awaited him, and triumphantly pulled out a banner, was to be decided. But Prince Andrei did not see how it ended. As if from the full swing of a strong stick, one of the nearest soldiers, as it seemed to him, hit him in the head. It hurt a little, and most importantly, unpleasant, because this pain entertained him and prevented him from seeing what he was looking at.
"What is this? I'm falling? my legs give way, ”he thought, and fell on his back. He opened his eyes, hoping to see how the fight between the French and the artillerymen ended, and wishing to know whether the red-haired artilleryman had been killed or not, whether the guns had been taken or saved. But he didn't take anything. Above him there was nothing but the sky—a high sky, not clear, but still immeasurably high, with gray clouds quietly creeping across it. “How quiet, calm and solemn, not at all the way I ran,” thought Prince Andrei, “not the way we ran, shouted and fought; not in the same way as the Frenchman and the artilleryman dragged each other's bannik with angry and frightened faces - not at all like the clouds crawling across this high, endless sky. How could I not have seen this lofty sky before? And how happy I am that I finally got to know him. Yes! everything is empty, everything is a lie, except for this endless sky. Nothing, nothing but him. But even that is not even there, there is nothing but silence, calmness. And thank God!…"

On the right flank at Bagration at 9 o'clock, the matter had not yet begun. Not wanting to agree to Dolgorukov's demand to start a business and wanting to deflect responsibility from himself, Prince Bagration suggested that Dolgorukov send the commander in chief to ask about it. Bagration knew that, at a distance of almost 10 miles, separating one flank from the other, if they did not kill the one who was sent (which was very likely), and if he even found the commander in chief, which was very difficult, the sent one would not have time to return earlier evenings.
Bagration glanced at his retinue with his large, expressionless, sleepy eyes, and Rostov's childish face, involuntarily dying with excitement and hope, was the first to catch his eye. He sent it.
- And if I meet his majesty before the commander-in-chief, your excellency? - said Rostov, holding his hand to the visor.
“You can pass it on to His Majesty,” said Dolgorukov hastily interrupting Bagration.
Having changed from the chain, Rostov managed to sleep a few hours before morning and felt cheerful, bold, resolute, with that elasticity of movements, confidence in his happiness and in that mood in which everything seems easy, fun and possible.

The Ministry of Internal Affairs belongs to the executive authorities, the employees of the department carry out law enforcement activities, monitor and prevent crimes of a different nature, and more recently also control the circulation of drugs and psychotropic substances in Russia. The structure includes paramilitary and civilian departments, the head is the Minister of the Interior Russian Federation V. A. Kolokoltsev.

general information

The structure is financed from the budget. Since 2010, the number of employees has been constantly decreasing, today the number of staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is a little more than 1 million people. Several years ago, a large-scale reform was carried out to transform the system. The concept was almost completely changed, from the militia the structure was renamed into the police, the official duties and law, tens of thousands of employees were laid off. Thanks to the reductions, salaries were significantly increased, and the conditions for recruitment changed. The reform raised the prestige of work in the ranks of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Since 2016, the abolished departments for combating drugs, as well as the Migration Service, have been included in the structure. All employees from the disbanded bodies moved to the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The management of the activities of the entire system and specifically the Minister of the Russian Federation is carried out by the President of the Russian Federation V.V. Putin.

Kind of activity

The Ministry of Internal Affairs is a paramilitary structure, the tasks and functions of which are determined by the Constitution of the Russian Federation, the Criminal Code and relevant federal laws. Principles of activity of employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs:

  • protection of life, health, rights and freedoms of every citizen of the Russian Federation;
  • law enforcement, security and law enforcement;
  • protection of society and the state from illegal actions;
  • implementation of legal regulation;
  • organization of work in the field of internal affairs, as well as issues related to migration;
  • development of a state policy strategy in the field of law enforcement;
  • ensuring road safety;
  • performance of functions to identify and prevent such cases;
  • security economic security at the regional and federal levels.

Interior Minister Kolokoltsev, together with the heads of other departments and law enforcement agencies, regularly organizes events to search for, prevent and prevent acts of a terrorist nature.

Reform

Transformations in the Ministry of Internal Affairs began in 2009, the purpose of the reform was to increase the efficiency of the executive body, as well as to raise the prestige of the structure in society. The reason was all sorts of scandals related to police officers, including murders, bribes, extortion, etc. At that time, Rashid Nurgaliyev was the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, and he announced the main directions of the reform:

  • reduction in the number of employees by 20%;
  • increase in salaries and incentive payments to certified employees;
  • optimization of some educational institutions;
  • changing the rules for selecting candidates.

In the period from 2009 to 2011, a large-scale recertification of employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs took place. As planned, only the most worthy people that have passed a rigorous selection according to physiological and psychological criteria. As a result, on the ground, the transformations did not fully justify themselves, bribery and family ties exist in the bodies even now. In addition, the approach to evaluating the work, the so-called stick system, remained unchanged.

Management

The Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation is appointed and dismissed from his post by the President of the Russian Federation. The minister has three deputies, the first deputy. - Gorovoy Alexander Vadimovich, Secretary of State - Zubov Igor Nikolaevich and Vanichkin Mikhail Georgievich. The residence of all senior leaders is located in Moscow.

The Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia Kolokoltsev has been in office since 2012, in the same year he was awarded the rank of police general. Under his leadership, the Ministry operates the Public Council, which includes artists, as well as workers in various fields. Their competence includes the following tasks:

  • to consider appeals of citizens about the violation of their rights and freedoms, to monitor their future fate;
  • organize inspections of various departments of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the observance of the rights and freedoms of citizens;
  • participate as an observer when receiving citizens by any official;
  • attend as independent observers at political or public meetings.

It is financed not from the budgetary spheres. Under the supervision of the Public Council today there are projects to improve road safety, as well as to combat corruption. Notable members include Sergei Bezrukov, Lyudmila Alekseeva, Artem Mikhalkov, Eduard Petrov. The chairman is attorney Anatoly Kucherin.

Biography of Vladimir Kolokoltsev

Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was born on May 11, 1961 in a small village Penza region. After graduating from school, he worked for some time at the factory as a driver and machinist. He served in the army on the border with Afghanistan. After graduation military service entered the ranks of internal affairs to ensure the security of diplomatic missions in Moscow. Two years later, he was appointed platoon commander of the police department of the Gagarinsky District Internal Affairs Directorate.

After receiving his education at the Higher Political School in Moscow, Kolokoltsev worked as an operative in the criminal investigation department in the Kuntsevo district. Since 1994, the future is experiencing a career take-off. He first becomes the senior detective of the criminal investigation department, later the head of the police department and the head of the criminal investigation department.

Since 2009, the President appointed Kolokoltsev head of the Main Department of Internal Affairs for Moscow, replacing the infamous Pronin, whose subordinate fired on people in a supermarket.

Activities as head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs

Kolokoltsev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs in 2012. The President entrusted him with the further transformation of the structure. By this time, it became clear that the reform did not live up to expectations, more than 20% of qualified employees left the system. Most of them are young and capable people. Personnel activity has become the main and priority area of ​​work for the new minister. First of all, the three first deputies left, Kolokoltsov accused them of the failure of the reform.

During his leadership, a number of major anti-corruption activities were carried out, including the arrest and charges against influential officials. This is the business of Defense Service and former minister of the Armed Forces of Serdyukov, the detention of Alexei Ulyukaev, as well as accusations against the mayor of Yaroslavl Yevgeny Urlashov, the governor of the Sakhalin region Alexander Khoroshavin, the governor of the Kirov region Nikita Belykh, etc.

Criticism

Some public figures and politicians accuse the Russian Minister of Internal Affairs of unnecessarily striving for the appearance of high-profile and resonant anti-corruption cases. And they attribute such zeal to the personal instructions of the president, the desire to show the people that the fight against bribe-takers is being carried out at an active pace.

Many questions were raised by the statement of Vladimir Kolokoltsev in February 2013 on the air of the program "Today". The Minister spoke harshly about the previous events: the abductions and murders of children in different regions of the country. Kolokoltsev bluntly stated that as a person, and not as a law enforcement officer, he advocates the return death penalty. The Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, Kolokoltsev, was immediately criticized for his statement. Opposition parties were especially outraged. But many ordinary citizens supported his position.

Scandal

For the entire period of Kolokoltsev's work in law enforcement agencies he was not implicated in any defamatory situations. Therefore, an investigation by journalists aroused particular scandalous interest, in which it was alleged that the minister's dissertation, for which he received a doctorate, had many borrowings. We found more than 4 parallels with other works on similar topics, even with the dissertation of Viktor Ivanov, the former head of the Federal Drug Control Service of Russia.

Handling rules

To get an appointment with the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, you must have a good and justified reason. You can find out more by calling the public reception of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Moscow. Registration takes place in advance, usually the reception lasts no more than 10-20 minutes, many issues can be resolved with the deputy ministers.

Acting Minister Demidov A. Yu. conducts a reception daily at 17-20, an appointment is made from 10 to 11 o'clock by calling the reception. Deputy Minister, Head of the Main Directorate Mikhailov V. N. receives citizens at 09-20, the appointment is also by phone. The schedule of visits and times are updated every month on the official portal of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

colonel general,
December 29, 2003 /
March 9, 2004 May 21, 2012 10 Kolokoltsev Vladimir Alexandrovich police lieutenant general (March 24, 2011),

Police Colonel General (June 12, 2013),
Police General of the Russian Federation (November 10, 2015)

May 21, 2012

First Deputy Ministers

Full name Rank date
destination
date
release
Main position
Abramov Evgeny Alexandrovich
January 29, 1992 August 18, 1995
Anikiev Anatoly Vasilievich 1990 May 25, 1992
Barannikov Viktor Pavlovich major general internal service (1989) 1990 September 8, 1990
Vasiliev Vladimir Abdualievich Colonel-General of Militia* April 26, 1997 May 31, 1999 Head of the GUOP of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (until May 9, 1998)
Golubets Pavel Vasilievich lieutenant general,
colonel general (1996)
August 18, 1995 November 22, 1996 Chief of the Main Staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (since February 26, 1996)
Gorovoy Alexander Vladimirovich police lieutenant general (March 29, 2011),
June 11, 2011
Dunaev Andrey Fyodorovich Lieutenant General of the Internal Service* January 29, 1992 July 22, 1993
Egorov Mikhail Konstantinovich militia Major General,
militia lieutenant general
October 19, 1992 August 18, 1995 Head of the GUOP of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Erin Victor Fedorovich Lieutenant General of the Internal Service* February 23, 1991 September 27, 1991
Zolotov Viktor Vasilievich colonel general (2006),
army general (November 10, 2015)
May 12, 2014
Kozlov Vladimir Ivanovich militia lieutenant general December 22, 1999 April 26, 2001
Kolesnikov Vladimir Ilyich militia lieutenant general,
Colonel General of Militia (1996)
August 18, 1995 February 2000
Komissarov Vyacheslav Sergeevich major general of internal service September 28, 1991 June 5, 1992 Head of the Criminal Police Service
Maslov Pavel Tikhonovich lieutenant general,
January 27, 1997 May 9, 1998 Chief of the General Staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Nurgaliev Rashid Gumarovich colonel general June 30, 2002 March 9, 2004 Head of the Criminal Police Service
Petrov Valery Nikolaevich militia Major General,
militia lieutenant general
November 8, 1995 March 31, 1997 Head of the GUOP of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Rogozhkin Nikolai Evgenievich army General December 20, 2013 May 12, 2014 chiefly
Solovyov Nikolai Georgievich lieutenant general of the internal service,
Colonel General of Justice (1999)
July 1, 1999 May 19, 2001
Strashko Vladimir Petrovich lieutenant general of the internal service,
Colonel General of the Internal Service (1998)
May 9, 1998 October 13, 1999 secretary of state
Sukhodolsky Mikhail Igorevich militia lieutenant general,
March 24, 2008 June 11, 2011
Fedorov Valery Ivanovich militia colonel general April 1, 1999 April 26, 2001 Head of the Investigative Committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (until July 1, 1999), Secretary of State (since 2000)
Chekalin Alexander Alekseevich militia colonel general July 19, 2004 March 24, 2008

Deputy Ministers

Full name Rank date
destination
date
care
Main position
ABRAMOV
Evgeny Alexandrovich
1990 January 29, 1992 Head of the Criminal Police Service
Alekseev Yury Fyodorovich Major General of Justice (June 14, 2012) June 14, 2012 February 17, 2014
Alyoshin Igor Viktorovich police lieutenant general (2011) June 11, 2011 June 14, 2012
Anichin Alexey Vasilievich Major General of Justice (2007)
lieutenant general of justice (July 3, 2009)
January 4, 2009 June 11, 2011 Head of the Investigative Committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (since April 18, 2006)
Bobrovsky Nikolay Leonidovich Lieutenant General of the Internal Service* July 10, 2001 June 30, 2002 Head of the Criminal Police Service
Bulavin Sergey Petrovich militia Major General,
police major general (June 11, 2011)
February 18, 2010 /
June 14, 2012 secretary of state
Vanichkin Mikhail Georgievich police lieutenant general (June 14, 2012) June 14, 2012
Vasiliev Vladimir Abdualievich militia colonel general March 28, 2001 December 2003 secretary of state
Veryovkin-Rakhalsky Sergey Vladimirovich lieutenant general (October 1999) March 11, 2003 February 28, 2005 Head of the Federal Service for Economic and Tax Crimes of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Golubev Ivan Ivanovich Colonel-General of Militia* April 1999 December 20, 2003†
Gerasimov Sergey Alexandrovich (no rank) February 18, 2010 /
October 28, 2014
Gostev Arkady Alexandrovich police major general (June 14, 2012),
police lieutenant general (February 21, 2014)
June 14, 2012
Dunaev Andrey Fyodorovich major general of internal service** October 1990 September 13, 1991 head of SIDiSR
DURBAZHEV
Vladimir Andreevich
major general (May 8, 1992),
lieutenant general,
colonel general of the internal service (1997)
November 8, 1995 1998 Head of Logistics of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Edelev Arkady Leonidovich militia lieutenant general,
militia colonel general
September 2004 February 18, 2010 Head of the ROSH for the counter-terrorist operation in the North Caucasus (until 2006)
Erin Victor Fedorovich major general of militia** 1990 February 23, 1991 Head of the Criminal Police Service
ZUBOV
Igor Nikolaevich (1 time)
militia lieutenant general,
militia colonel general
July 1, 1999 March 27, 2001
ZUBOV
Igor Nikolaevich
(2 times)
Acting State Councilor of the Russian Federation, 1st class June 14, 2012 Secretary of State
Ignatiev Mikhail Alexandrovich lieutenant general of the internal service,
Colonel General of the Internal Service
July 10, 2001 February 28, 2005 Head of the Logistics Service
KIRYANOV
Viktor Nikolaevich
Colonel General of Militia (July 3, 2009),
January 31, 2011 /
December 11, 2015 Supervised transport safety
Kozhevnikov Igor Nikolaevich militia Major General,
Lieutenant General of Justice,
Colonel General of Justice
January 29, 1992 April 1, 1999 Head of the Investigative Committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Kozhokar Valery Vasilievich militia lieutenant general,
police lieutenant general* (April 14, 2011)
June 11, 2011 June 14, 2012 Head of the Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Kostenko Anatoly Ivanovich Major General of Internal Service* February 4, 1991 June 5, 1992 Head of the Financial, Logistics and Capital Construction Service
Kulikov Alexander Nikolaevich militia Major General,
militia lieutenant general (1992),
Colonel General of Militia (1993)
January 29, 1992 November 8, 1995
Kulikov Anatoly Sergeevich major general (February 18, 1988),
lieutenant general (February 19, 1993),
colonel general (October 7, 1993) *
December 23, 1992 July 19, 1995 Commander of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Kulikov Nikolay Vasilievich colonel-general of militia (1999)* October 20, 1998 December 2, 1999 /
Head of the Main Department of Internal Affairs of Moscow
Latyshev Petr Mikhailovich militia lieutenant general,
August 29, 1994 May 18, 2000
Maltsev Yury Alekseevich rear admiral July 2003 September 13, 2004
Maslov Pavel Tikhonovich lieutenant general (1995),
colonel general (June 12, 1998)
May 9, 1998 April 5, 1999 Commander-in-Chief of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
MAKHONOV
Alexander Mikhailovich
Acting State Councilor of the Russian Federation, 3rd class February 17, 2015
MIRONOV
Dmitry Yurievich
major general,
police lieutenant general (February 20, 2016)
December 23, 2015 July 28, 2016 Supervised transport safety and road safety issues
MISHCHENKOV
Pyotr Grigorievich
lieutenant general of the internal service (May 8, 1992) September 28, 1991 November 7, 1997 Head of SIDiSR (until spring 1992)
Mozyakov Vitaly Vladimirovich Major General of Justice,
lieutenant general of justice
April 3, 2001 February 28, 2005 Head of the Investigative Committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Nelezin Pyotr Vasilievich lieutenant general of the internal service,
colonel general of the internal service (2000)
July 1, 1999 July 10, 2001
Novikov Andrey Petrovich militia lieutenant general,
Colonel General of Militia (2006)
February 28, 2005 November 14, 2006
Ovchinnikov Vyacheslav Viktorovich lieutenant general (March 2, 1999),
colonel general (April 5, 1999)
April 5, 1999 January 22, 2000 Commander-in-Chief of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Ovchinnikov Nikolai Alexandrovich militia lieutenant general,
Colonel General of Militia (2008)
March 17, 2006 February 18, 2010 Secretary of State, supervised the transport police and the Department of sensitive facilities
Pankin, Vyacheslav Kirillovich militia lieutenant general** 1991 1992
Pankov Mikhail Anatolievich Colonel General of the Internal Service (2002) April 10, 2002 February 28, 2005
Rogozhkin Nikolai Evgenievich army General January 11, 2009 December 20, 2013 Commander-in-Chief of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Romanov Anatoly Alexandrovich lieutenant general (February 23, 1994),
colonel general (November 7, 1995)
July 19, 1995 December 28, 1995 Commander of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Rudchenko Mikhail Methodievich militia lieutenant general August 4, 2001 January 27, 2002† Head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Southern federal district
RUSHAILO
Vladimir Borisovich
major general of militia (1994),

police lieutenant general (November 1998)*

May 9, 1998 May 21, 1999 Supervised the activities of the GUOP MIA and the criminal investigation system
Savenkov Alexander Nikolaevich Colonel General of Justice May 12, 2014 Head of the Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation
Safonov Oleg Alexandrovich lieutenant general,
militia colonel general
November 14, 2006 October 29, 2007
Semiletov Fedor Fedorovich major general of militia** January 2, 1990 n/a
Smirny Alexander Mikhailovich militia lieutenant general,
Police Colonel General,
Police Colonel General (June 11, 2011)
September 4, 2008 /
June 14, 2012
Solovyov Evgeny Borisovich colonel general,
militia colonel general
April 3, 2001 February 28, 2005
Strashko Vladimir Petrovich major general of internal service,
lieutenant general of the internal service (1993)
January 29, 1992 November 8, 1995 secretary of state
Sukhodolsky Mikhail Igorevich militia Major General,
militia lieutenant general (2006)
February 28, 2005 March 24, 2008
Tikhomirov Vyacheslav Valentinovich colonel general (January 15, 2000),
army general (November 6, 2002)
January 22, 2000 July 19, 2004 Commander-in-Chief of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Turbin Vitaly Borisovich Lieutenant General of the Internal Service* April 18, 1992 July 4, 1994
Ustinov A.F. n/a ??? June 18, 1991
Fedorov Valery Ivanovich militia lieutenant general,
Colonel-General of Militia (1997)
December 4, 1995 April 1, 1999 Head of the Main Personnel Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation (since February 26, 1996), then Secretary of State
Frolov Vasily Alekseevich major general of militia** 1990 January 24, 1992 head of the SIDiSR (until September 28, 1991), then head of the personnel service
Chekalin Alexander Alekseevich militia lieutenant general,
militia colonel general
August 28, 2000 July 19, 2004 head of the Public Security Service (July 10, 2001 - August 27, 2003), then head of the FMS of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (until June 3, 2004)
Chernenko Andrey Grigorievich
(1 time)
lieutenant general of the internal service April 1, 1999 May 25, 1999
Chernenko Andrey Grigorievich
(2 times)
Colonel General of the Internal Service February 23, 2002 April 5, 2003 Head of the Federal Migration Service of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Chernyavsky Valentin Semyonovich militia lieutenant general* 2000 July 10, 2001
Shevtsov Leonty Pavlovich colonel general (February 9, 1995) July 24, 1997 April 6, 1999 commander, commander-in-chief of the internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia (until May 25, 1998)
Shkirko Anatoly Afanasyevich lieutenant general (November 6, 1993),
colonel general (March 30, 1996)
December 28, 1995 July 24, 1997 Commander of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
Shkolov Evgeny Mikhailovich (no rank) November 19, 2007 June 11, 2011
Shchadrin Sergei Fyodorovich militia colonel general October 6, 2003 February 28, 2005 head of the Public Security Service

Designations: * - rank at the time of resignation, ** - rank at the time of appointment.

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An excerpt characterizing the leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia

– Eh bien? [Well?] said Napoleon.
- Un cosaque de Platow [Platov Cossack.] says that Platov's corps is connected with big army that Kutuzov was appointed commander in chief. Tres intelligent et bavard! [Very smart and chatterbox!]
Napoleon smiled, ordered to give this Cossack a horse and bring him to him. He himself wanted to talk to him. Several adjutants galloped, and an hour later the serf Denisov, who had been ceded to Rostov by him, Lavrushka, in a batman's jacket on a French cavalry saddle, with a roguish and drunken, cheerful face, rode up to Napoleon. Napoleon ordered him to ride beside him and began to ask:
- Are you a Cossack?
- Cossack, your honor.
"Le cosaque ignorant la compagnie dans laquelle il se trouvait, car la simplicite de Napoleon n" avait rien qui put reveler a une imagination orientale la presence d "un souverain, s" entretint avec la plus extreme familiarite des affaires de la guerre actuelle" , [The Cossack, not knowing the society in which he was, because the simplicity of Napoleon had nothing that could open the presence of the sovereign to the Eastern imagination, spoke with extreme familiarity about the circumstances of this war.] - says Thiers, telling this episode Indeed, Lavrushka, who got drunk and left the master without lunch, was flogged the day before and sent to the village for chickens, where he became addicted to looting and was taken prisoner by the French. it is a duty to do everything with meanness and cunning, who are ready to do any service to their master and who cunningly guess the master's bad thoughts, especially vanity and pettiness.
Once in the company of Napoleon, whose personality he recognized very well and easily. Lavrushka was not in the least embarrassed and only tried with all his heart to deserve the new masters.
He knew very well that it was Napoleon himself, and the presence of Napoleon could not embarrass him more than the presence of Rostov or the sergeant with rods, because he had nothing that neither the sergeant nor Napoleon could deprive him of.
He lied everything that was interpreted between the batmen. Much of this was true. But when Napoleon asked him what the Russians think, whether they will defeat Bonaparte or not, Lavrushka narrowed his eyes and thought.
He saw subtle cunning here, as people like Lavrushka always see cunning in everything, he frowned and was silent.
“It means: if you are in battle,” he said thoughtfully, “and in speed, that’s right.” Well, if three days pass after that same date, then, then, this very battle will go into delay.
Napoleon was translated as follows: “Si la bataille est donnee avant trois jours, les Francais la gagneraient, mais que si elle serait donnee plus tard, Dieu seul sait ce qui en arrivrait”, [“If the battle takes place before three days, then the French will win him, but if after three days, then God knows what will happen. ”] Lelorgne d "Ideville conveyed smiling. Napoleon did not smile, although he apparently was in the most cheerful mood, and ordered to repeat these words to himself.
Lavrushka noticed this and, to cheer him up, he said, pretending not to know who he was.
“We know that you have Bonaparte, he beat everyone in the world, well, another article about us ...” he said, not knowing himself how and why boastful patriotism slipped through his words in the end. The interpreter relayed these words to Napoleon without ending, and Bonaparte smiled. “Le jeune Cosaque fit sourire son puissant interlocuteur,” [The young Cossack made his powerful interlocutor smile.] says Thiers. After walking a few steps in silence, Napoleon turned to Berthier and said that he wanted to experience the effect that sur cet enfant du Don [on this child of the Don] would have the news that the person to whom this enfant du Don was speaking was the Emperor himself. , the same emperor who wrote the immortally victorious name on the pyramids.
The message has been passed on.
Lavrushka (realizing that this was done to puzzle him, and that Napoleon thought he would be frightened), in order to please the new masters, immediately pretended to be astonished, stunned, bulged his eyes and made the same face that he was accustomed to when they led him flog. “A peine l" interprete de Napoleon, says Thiers, - avait il parle, que le Cosaque, saisi d "une sorte d" ebahissement, no profera plus une parole et marcha les yeux constamment attaches sur ce conquerant, dont le nom avait penetre jusqu "a lui, a travers les steppes de l" Orient. Toute sa loquacite s "etait subitement arretee, pour faire place a un sentiment d" admiration naive et silencieuse. Napoleon, apres l "avoir recompense, lui fit donner la liberte , comme a un oiseau qu"on rend aux champs qui l"ont vu naitre". [As soon as Napoleon's interpreter said this to the Cossack, the Cossack, seized by some kind of stupefaction, did not utter a single word more and continued to ride, not taking his eyes off the conqueror, whose name had reached him through the eastern steppes. All his talkativeness suddenly stopped and was replaced by a naive and silent feeling of delight. Napoleon, having rewarded the Cossack, ordered to give him freedom, like a bird that is returned to its native fields.]
Napoleon rode on, dreaming of that Moscou that so occupied his imagination, a l "oiseau qu" on rendit aux champs qui l "on vu naitre [a bird returned to its native fields] galloped to outposts, thinking ahead of everything that was not there and He did not want to tell what really happened to him, precisely because it seemed to him unworthy of a story. found his master Nikolai Rostov, who was stationed in Yankovo ​​and had just mounted on horseback in order to take a walk with Ilyin in the surrounding villages.He gave another horse to Lavrushka and took him with him.

Princess Mary was not in Moscow and out of danger, as Prince Andrei thought.
After the return of Alpatych from Smolensk, the old prince, as it were, suddenly came to his senses from a dream. He ordered to gather militia from the villages, arm them and wrote a letter to the commander-in-chief, in which he informed him of his intention to remain in the Bald Mountains to the last extreme, to defend himself, leaving it at his discretion to take or not to take measures to protect the Bald Mountains, in which he would be taken one of the oldest Russian generals was captured or killed, and announced to his family that he was staying in Lysy Gory.
But, remaining himself in the Bald Mountains, the prince ordered the dispatch of the princess and Desal with the little prince to Bogucharovo and from there to Moscow. Princess Mary, frightened by the feverish, sleepless activity of her father, which replaced his former omission, could not make up her mind to leave him alone and for the first time in her life allowed herself to disobey him. She refused to go, and a terrible thunderstorm of the prince's anger fell upon her. He reminded her of everything in which he had been unfair to her. Trying to accuse her, he told her that she had tormented him, that she had quarreled with him, that she had nasty suspicions against him, that she had made it her life's task to poison his life, and drove her out of his office, telling her that if she he won't leave, he doesn't care. He said that he did not want to know about her existence, but he warned her in advance that she should not dare to catch his eye. The fact that, contrary to Princess Mary's fears, he did not order her to be taken away by force, but only did not order her to show herself, pleased Princess Mary. She knew that this proved that in the very secret of his soul he was glad that she stayed at home and did not leave.
The next day after Nikolushka's departure, the old prince put on his full uniform in the morning and got ready to go to the commander-in-chief. The wheelchair has already been served. Princess Marya saw how he, in uniform and all the orders, left the house and went into the garden to review the armed peasants and the yard. Princess Mary saw at the window, listening to his voice, which was heard from the garden. Suddenly, several people ran out of the alley with frightened faces.
Princess Mary ran out onto the porch, onto the flower path and into the alley. A large crowd of militiamen and courtyards was advancing towards her, and in the middle of this crowd several people were dragging a little old man in a uniform and medals by the arms. Princess Marya ran up to him and, in the play of small circles of falling light, through the shadow of the linden alley, could not give herself an account of what a change had taken place in his face. One thing that she saw was that the former stern and resolute expression of his face was replaced by an expression of timidity and submissiveness. When he saw his daughter, he moved his helpless lips and wheezed. It was impossible to understand what he wanted. They picked him up, carried him into the office and laid him on the sofa, which he had been so afraid of lately.
The doctor brought in bled the same night and announced that the prince had a stroke on the right side.
It became more and more dangerous to stay in the Bald Mountains, and the next day after the prince's blow, they were taken to Bogucharovo. The doctor went with them.
When they arrived in Bogucharovo, Desalle and the little prince had already left for Moscow.
Still in the same position, no worse and no better, paralyzed, the old prince lay for three weeks in Bogucharovo in a new house built by Prince Andrei. The old prince was unconscious; he lay like a mutilated corpse. He kept mumbling something, twitching his eyebrows and lips, and it was impossible to know whether he understood or not what surrounded him. One thing could be known for sure - this is that he suffered and felt the need to express something more. But what it was, no one could understand; was it some whim of a sick and half-mad man, did it relate to the general course of affairs, or did it relate to family circumstances?
The doctor said that the anxiety he expressed meant nothing, that it had physical causes; but Princess Marya thought (and the fact that her presence always increased his anxiety confirmed her assumption), she thought that he wanted to tell her something. He obviously suffered both physically and mentally.
There was no hope for a cure. It was impossible to take him. And what would happen if he died dearly? “Would it not be better if it were the end, the end at all! Princess Mary sometimes thought. She watched him day and night, almost without sleep, and, scary to say, she often watched him, not with the hope of finding signs of relief, but watched, often wishing to find signs of the approach of the end.
Strange as it was, the princess was aware of this feeling in herself, but it was in her. And what was even more terrible for Princess Marya was that since the time of her father’s illness (even almost earlier, wasn’t it then, when she, expecting something, stayed with him), all those who had fallen asleep in her woke up in her, forgotten personal desires and hopes. What had not occurred to her for years - thoughts about a free life without the eternal fear of her father, even thoughts about the possibility of love and family happiness, like the temptations of the devil, were constantly rushing through her imagination. No matter how she pushed herself away from herself, questions constantly came to her mind about how she would arrange her life now, after that. These were the temptations of the devil, and Princess Marya knew this. She knew that the only weapon against him was prayer, and she tried to pray. She became in the position of prayer, looked at the images, read the words of the prayer, but could not pray. She felt that now she was embraced by another world - worldly, difficult and free activity, completely opposite to the moral world in which she had been imprisoned before and in which prayer was the best consolation. She could not pray and could not cry, and worldly care seized her.
Staying in Vogucharovo became dangerous. From all sides they could hear about the approaching French, and in one village, fifteen miles from Bogucharov, the estate was plundered by French marauders.
The doctor insisted that the prince should be taken further; the leader sent an official to Princess Mary, persuading her to leave as soon as possible. The police officer, having arrived in Bogucharovo, insisted on the same, saying that the French were forty miles away, that French proclamations were circulating in the villages, and that if the princess did not leave with her father before the fifteenth, then he would not be responsible for anything.
The princess on the fifteenth decided to go. The worries of preparations, giving orders, for which everyone turned to her, occupied her all day. She spent the night from the fourteenth to the fifteenth, as usual, without undressing, in the room next to the one in which the prince lay. Several times, waking up, she heard his groaning, muttering, the creaking of the bed, and the steps of Tikhon and the doctor turning him over. Several times she listened at the door, and it seemed to her that today he muttered louder than usual and tossed and turned more often. She could not sleep and several times approached the door, listening, wanting to enter and not daring to do so. Although he did not speak, Princess Marya saw, knew how unpleasant any expression of fear for him was to him. She noticed how dissatisfied he turned away from her gaze, sometimes involuntarily and stubbornly directed at him. She knew that her arrival at night, at an unusual time, would annoy him.
But she had never been so sorry, she had never been so afraid of losing him. She recalled her whole life with him, and in every word and deed of him she found an expression of his love for her. Occasionally, between these memories, the temptations of the devil burst into her imagination, thoughts about what would happen after his death and how her new, free life would be arranged. But with disgust she drove away these thoughts. By morning it was quiet, and she fell asleep.
She woke up late. The sincerity that comes with awakening clearly showed her what occupied her most in her father's illness. She woke up, listened to what was behind the door, and, hearing his groaning, told herself with a sigh that everything was the same.
- But what to be? What did I want? I want him dead! she cried out in disgust at herself.
She dressed, washed, read prayers and went out onto the porch. Horseless carriages were brought up to the porch, in which things were being packed.
The morning was warm and grey. Princess Marya stopped on the porch, never ceasingly horrified by her spiritual abomination and trying to put her thoughts in order before entering him.
The Doctor stepped down the stairs and approached her.
"He's better today," said the doctor. - I was looking for you. You can understand something from what he says, the head is fresher. Let's go. He is calling you...
Princess Mary's heart beat so violently at this news that she turned pale and leaned against the door so as not to fall. To see him, to talk to him, to fall under his gaze now, when Princess Mary's whole soul was overwhelmed by these terrible criminal temptations, was excruciatingly joyful and terrible.
“Come on,” the doctor said.
Princess Marya went in to her father and went up to the bed. He lay high on his back, with his small, bony hands covered with lilac knotted veins, on the blanket, with his left eye fixed straight and his right eye squinting, with motionless eyebrows and lips. He was all so thin, small and miserable. His face seemed to have shriveled or melted, shrunken features. Princess Mary came up and kissed his hand. Left hand She squeezed her hand so that it was clear that he had been waiting for her for a long time. He tugged at her hand, and his eyebrows and lips moved angrily.
She looked at him fearfully, trying to guess what he wanted from her. When she shifted her position and shifted so that her left eye could see her face, he calmed down, not taking his eyes off her for a few seconds. Then his lips and tongue moved, sounds were heard, and he began to speak, timidly and imploringly looking at her, apparently afraid that she would not understand him.
Princess Mary, straining all her powers of attention, looked at him. The comic labor with which he rolled his tongue forced Princess Marya to lower her eyes and with difficulty suppress the sobs rising in her throat. He said something, repeating his words several times. Princess Mary could not understand them; but she tried to guess what he was saying, and repeated inquiringly the elephants he had said.
“Gaga – fights… fights…” he repeated several times. It was impossible to understand these words. The doctor thought that he had guessed right, and, repeating his words, asked: is the princess afraid? He shook his head negatively and repeated the same thing again...
“My soul, my soul hurts,” Princess Mary guessed and said. He moaned affirmatively, took her hand and began to press it to various places on his chest, as if looking for a real place for her.
- All thoughts! about you… thoughts,” he then spoke much better and more clearly than before, now that he was sure that he was understood. Princess Mary pressed her head against his hand, trying to hide her sobs and tears.
He ran his hand through her hair.
“I called you all night…” he said.
“If I knew…” she said through her tears. - I was afraid to enter.
He shook her hand.
- Didn't you sleep?
“No, I didn’t sleep,” said Princess Mary, shaking her head negatively. Involuntarily obeying her father, she now, just as he spoke, tried to speak more in signs and, as it were, also with difficulty rolling her tongue.
- Darling ... - or - my friend ... - Princess Marya could not make out; but, probably, from the expression of his look, a tender, caressing word was said, which he never said. - Why didn't you come?
“And I wished, wished for his death! thought Princess Mary. He paused.
- Thank you ... daughter, friend ... for everything, for everything ... sorry ... thank you ... sorry ... thank you! .. - And tears flowed from his eyes. “Call Andryusha,” he suddenly said, and something childishly timid and distrustful expressed itself in his face at this request. It was as if he himself knew that his demand was meaningless. So, at least, it seemed to Princess Mary.
“I received a letter from him,” answered Princess Mary.
He looked at her with surprise and timidity.
- Where is he?
- He is in the army, mon pere, in Smolensk.
He was silent for a long time, closing his eyes; then in the affirmative, as if in answer to his doubts and in confirmation that he now understood and remembered everything, nodded his head and opened his eyes.
“Yes,” he said clearly and quietly. - Russia is dead! Ruined! And he sobbed again, and tears flowed from his eyes. Princess Mary could no longer restrain herself and wept too, looking at his face.
He closed his eyes again. His sobs stopped. He made a sign with his hand to his eyes; and Tikhon, understanding him, wiped away his tears.
Then he opened his eyes and said something that no one could understand for a long time and, finally, he understood and conveyed only Tikhon. Princess Mary was looking for the meaning of his words in the mood in which he spoke a minute before. Now she thought that he was talking about Russia, then about Prince Andrei, then about her, about her grandson, then about his death. And because of this, she could not guess his words.
- put on your White dress I love him,” he said.
Understanding these words, Princess Marya sobbed even louder, and the doctor, taking her by the arm, led her out of the room to the terrace, persuading her to calm down and make preparations for her departure. After Princess Mary left the prince, he again spoke about his son, about the war, about the sovereign, twitched his eyebrows angrily, began to raise a hoarse voice, and with him came the second and last blow.
Princess Mary stopped on the terrace. The day cleared up, it was sunny and hot. She could understand nothing, think of nothing, and feel nothing but her passionate love for her father, a love she thought she had not known until that moment. She ran out into the garden and, sobbing, ran down to the pond along the young linden paths planted by Prince Andrei.
“Yes… I… I… I.” I wished for his death. Yes, I wanted it to end soon... I wanted to calm down... But what will happen to me? What do I need peace of mind when he’s gone, ”Princess Marya muttered aloud, walking quickly through the garden and pressing her hands on her chest, from which sobs frantically burst out. Walking around the circle in the garden, which led her back to the house, she saw m lle Bourienne (who had remained in Bogucharovo and did not want to leave) coming towards her and unknown man. It was the leader of the district, who himself came to the princess in order to present to her the need for an early departure. Princess Mary listened and did not understand him; she led him into the house, offered him breakfast, and sat down with him. Then, apologizing to the leader, she went to the door of the old prince. The doctor, with an alarmed face, came out to her and said that it was impossible.
- Go, princess, go, go!
Princess Marya went back into the garden and under the hill by the pond, in a place where no one could see, sat down on the grass. She did not know how long she had been there. Someone's running female steps along the path made her wake up. She got up and saw that Dunyasha, her maid, obviously running after her, suddenly, as if frightened by the sight of her young lady, stopped.
“Please, princess ... prince ...” Dunyasha said in a broken voice.
“Now, I’m going, I’m going,” the princess began hastily, not giving Dunyasha time to finish what she had to say, and, trying not to see Dunyasha, she ran to the house.
“Princess, the will of God is being done, you must be ready for anything,” said the leader, meeting her at the front door.
- Leave me. It is not true! she yelled angrily at him. The doctor wanted to stop her. She pushed him away and ran to the door. “And why are these people with frightened faces stopping me? I don't need anyone! And what are they doing here? She opened the door, and the bright daylight in that previously dim room terrified her. There were women and a nurse in the room. They all moved away from the bed, making way for her. He lay still on the bed; but the stern look of his calm face stopped Princess Marya on the threshold of the room.
"No, he's not dead, it can't be! - Princess Mary said to herself, went up to him and, overcoming the horror that seized her, pressed her lips to his cheek. But she immediately pulled away from him. Instantly, all the strength of tenderness for him, which she felt in herself, disappeared and was replaced by a feeling of horror for what was before her. “No, he is no more! He is not there, but right there, in the same place where he was, something alien and hostile, some kind of terrible, terrifying and repulsive secret ... - And, covering her face with her hands, Princess Marya fell into the hands of the doctor, who supported her.
In the presence of Tikhon and the doctor, the women washed what he was, tied a handkerchief around his head so that his open mouth would not stiffen, and tied his diverging legs with another handkerchief. Then they put on a uniform with medals and laid a small shriveled body on the table. God knows who and when took care of this, but everything became as if by itself. By night, candles burned around the coffin, there was a cover on the coffin, juniper was sprinkled on the floor, a printed prayer was placed under the dead, shrunken head, and a deacon sat in the corner, reading a psalter.
As horses shied away, crowded and snorted over a dead horse, so in the living room around the coffin crowded people of strangers and their own - the leader, and the headman, and the women, and all with fixed, frightened eyes, crossed themselves and bowed, and kissed the cold and stiff hand of the old prince.

Bogucharovo was always, before Prince Andrei settled in it, a private estate, and the men of Bogucharov had a completely different character from those of Lysogorsk. They differed from them in speech, clothing, and customs. They were called steppes. The old prince praised them for their endurance in their work when they came to help clean up the Bald Mountains or dig ponds and ditches, but did not like them for their savagery.
The last stay in Bogucharovo of Prince Andrei, with his innovations - hospitals, schools and easier dues - did not soften their morals, but, on the contrary, strengthened in them those character traits that the old prince called savagery. Between them there were always some kind of obscure talk, either about listing them all as Cossacks, or about a new faith to which they would be converted, then about some royal lists, then about an oath to Pavel Petrovich in 1797 (about which they said that then even the will came out, but the gentlemen took it away), then about Peter Feodorovich, who will reign in seven years, under whom everything will be free and it will be so simple that nothing will happen. Rumors about the war in Bonaparte and his invasion combined for them with the same vague ideas about the Antichrist, the end of the world and pure will.
In the vicinity of Bogucharov there were more and more large villages, state-owned and quitrent landlords. There were very few landowners living in this area; there were also very few servants and literates, and in the life of the peasants of this area were more noticeable and stronger than in others, those mysterious jets of Russian folk life, the causes and significance of which are inexplicable to contemporaries. One of these phenomena was the movement between the peasants of this area to move to some warm rivers, which manifested itself about twenty years ago. Hundreds of peasants, including Bogucharov's, suddenly began to sell their livestock and leave with their families somewhere to the southeast. Like birds flying somewhere beyond the seas, these people with their wives and children strove to go there, to the southeast, where none of them had been. They went up in caravans, bathed one by one, ran, and rode, and went there, to the warm rivers. Many were punished, exiled to Siberia, many died of cold and starvation along the way, many returned on their own, and the movement died down by itself just as it had begun without an obvious reason. But underwater jets did not stop flowing in this people and gathered for some new strength, which has to appear just as strange, unexpectedly and at the same time simply, naturally and strongly. Now, in 1812, for a person who lived close to the people, it was noticeable that these underwater jets produced strong work and were close to manifestation.
Alpatych, having arrived in Bogucharovo some time before the death of the old prince, noticed that there was unrest among the people and that, contrary to what was happening in the Bald Mountains on a sixty-verst radius, where all the peasants left (leaving the Cossacks to ruin their villages), in the steppe zone , in Bogucharovskaya, the peasants, as was heard, had relations with the French, received some papers that went between them, and remained in their places. He knew through the courtyard people devoted to him that the peasant Karp, who had recently traveled with a state-owned cart, and who had a great influence on the world, returned with the news that the Cossacks were devastating the villages from which the inhabitants came out, but that the French did not touch them. He knew that another peasant had even brought yesterday from the village of Visloukhovo, where the French were stationed, a paper from the French general, in which the inhabitants were declared that no harm would be done to them and that everything that was taken from them would be paid for if they stayed. As proof of this, the peasant brought from Visloukhov one hundred rubles in banknotes (he did not know that they were fake), given to him in advance for hay.
Finally, and most importantly, Alpatych knew that on the very day he ordered the headman to collect carts for the export of the princess's convoy from Bogucharov, in the morning there was a gathering in the village, at which it was supposed not to be taken out and wait. Meanwhile, time was running out. The leader, on the day of the death of the prince, on August 15, insisted on Princess Marya that she leave on the same day, as it was becoming dangerous. He said that after the 16th he was not responsible for anything. On the day of the prince's death, he left in the evening, but promised to come to the funeral the next day. But the next day he could not come, because, according to the news he himself received, the French suddenly moved in, and he only managed to take his family and everything valuable from his estate.
For about thirty years, Bogucharov was ruled by the headman Dron, whom the old prince called Dronushka.
Dron was one of those physically and morally strong men who, as soon as they enter the age, will grow a beard, and so, without changing, live up to sixty - seventy years, without one gray hair or lack of a tooth, as straight and strong at sixty as at thirty.
Dron, soon after moving to the warm rivers, in which he participated, like others, was made headman steward in Bogucharovo, and since then he has been flawlessly in this position for twenty-three years. The men were more afraid of him than the master. Gentlemen, and the old prince, and the young, and the manager, respected him and jokingly called him a minister. During all the time of his service, Dron was never drunk or sick; never, not after sleepless nights, not after any kind of labor, did he show the slightest fatigue and, not knowing how to read and write, never forgot a single account of money and pounds of flour for the huge carts that he sold, and not a single shock of snakes for bread on every tithe of the Bogucharov fields.
This Dron Alpatych, who came from the devastated Bald Mountains, called to himself on the day of the prince's funeral and ordered him to prepare twelve horses for the carriages of the princess and eighteen carts for the convoy, which was to be raised from Bogucharov. Although the peasants were quitrents, the execution of this order could not meet with difficulties, according to Alpatych, since there were two hundred and thirty taxes in Bogucharovo and the peasants were prosperous. But Elder Dron, having listened to the order, silently lowered his eyes. Alpatych told him the men he knew and from whom he ordered to take carts.
The drone answered that these peasants had horses in a cart. Alpatych named other men, and those horses did not have, according to Dron, some were under state-owned carts, others were powerless, and the horses of others died from starvation. Horses, according to Dron, could not be collected not only for wagon trains, but also for carriages.
Alpatych carefully looked at Dron and frowned. Just as Dron was an exemplary headman, so Alpatych not without reason managed the prince's estates for twenty years and was an exemplary manager. He was eminently able to understand by instinct the needs and instincts of the people with whom he dealt, and therefore he was an excellent manager. Glancing at Dron, he immediately realized that Dron's answers were not an expression of Dron's thoughts, but an expression of that general mood of the Bogucharov world, by which the headman had already been captured. But at the same time, he knew that Dron, who had profited and hated by the world, had to fluctuate between two camps - the masters and the peasants. He noticed this hesitation in his gaze, and therefore Alpatych, frowning, moved closer to Dron.

Police General of the Russian Federation Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was born on May 11, 1961 in the city of Nizhny Lomov, Penza Region. He entered the service in the internal affairs bodies in 1982 in the police department for the protection of diplomatic missions foreign states accredited in Moscow.

In 1984, he was appointed to the post of platoon commander of a separate battalion of the PPSM of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Gagarinsky District Executive Committee of Moscow.

In 1985, he entered the full-time department of the Higher Political School named after the 60th anniversary of the Komsomol of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR at the faculty with a degree in Jurisprudence, from which he graduated in 1989. After completing his studies, he returned to service in the Department of Internal Affairs as an operative of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Department of Internal Affairs of the Kuntsevsky District Executive Committee Moscow.

After that, he was appointed deputy head of the 20th police department in Moscow, then head 8 police departments in Moscow.

In 1992, Vladimir Alexandrovich was sent to the Criminal Investigation Department to the position of senior detective of the 2nd department of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Main Internal Affairs Directorate of Moscow. At the beginning of 1993, he was appointed head of the 108th police department in Moscow. After 2 years, he was approved as the head of the criminal investigation department.
2 District Department of Internal Affairs of the Central Administrative District of Moscow.

In 1997, he transferred to the service in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia as head of the 4th regional department of the RUOP for the city of Moscow under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. Two years later, he was appointed head of the regional operational-investigative bureau for the South-Eastern Administrative District of Moscow of the Central Regional Directorate for Combating Organized Crime under the Main Directorate for Combating Organized Crime of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

In 2001, he became the head of the 3rd department of the operational-search bureau of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Central Federal District. Subsequently, he was appointed deputy head of the operational-search bureau of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Central Federal District.

In 2007, he was appointed head of the Department of Internal Affairs for the Oryol region. In April 2009, he became First Deputy Head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

On September 7, 2009, by the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, Major General of Militia Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed head of the Main Directorate of Internal Affairs for Moscow.

June 10, 2010 Awarded by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation special rank"lieutenant general of militia"

On March 24, 2011, after passing the re-certification by the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, he was appointed to the post of head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the city of Moscow with the assignment of the special rank of "police lieutenant general".

On May 21, 2012, by the decree of the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, Police Lieutenant General Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

On June 12, 2013, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation No. 556, Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was awarded the special rank of "Police Colonel General".

On November 10, 2015, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation No. 554, Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was awarded the special rank of "Police General of the Russian Federation"

May 18, 2018 by Decree of the President Russian Federation No. 230 Vladimir Alexandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Kolokoltsev Vladimir Alexandrovich is married, has a son and a daughter. Doctor legal sciences. Honored Officer of the Department of Internal Affairs. Has state and departmental awards.

Ilinykh Oleg Vladimirovich was born on August 2, 1974 in the city of Gorno-Altaisk, Altai Territory, higher education. In 1995 he graduated from the Barnaul Special high school training of the commanding staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, in 2002 - the Barnaul Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, in 2007 - the Academy of Management of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

He began his service in the internal affairs bodies on May 16, 1993 as a guard policeman for the protection of buildings of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Altai. In 1995, he was appointed to the position of detective of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Internal Affairs Department of Gorno-Altaisk of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Altai, in 1997 - to the position of senior detective of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Internal Affairs Department of Gorno-Altaisk of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Altai. In 1999, he was appointed to the position of Deputy Head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Gorno-Altaisk Internal Affairs Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Altai, in 2002 - to the position of Head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Gorno-Altaisk Internal Affairs Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Altai Republic.

In 2003, he was appointed head of the Shebalinsky District Department of Internal Affairs of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Altai. In 2005 he was sent to the 1st faculty of the Academy of Management of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia in Moscow for full-time education.

In 2008, he was appointed to the position of Deputy Head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Republic of Altai. In 2009, he was sent to serve in the North Caucasus region as the head of the criminal police of the mobile detachment of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs in the Republic of Dagestan.

In 2010, he was appointed to the position of head of the Department of Internal Affairs for the city of Gorno-Altaisk of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Republic of Altai, in 2011 - to the position of Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs for the Republic of Altai - chief of police.

By Decree of the President of the Russian Federation dated June 26, 2013 No. 577, he was appointed Head of the Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation for the Nenets Autonomous District.

By Decree of the President of the Russian Federation dated December 23, 2015 No. 657, he was appointed to the post of Head of the Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation for the Kurgan Region.

By Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of February 22, 2017 No. 83, Oleg Vladimirovich Ilinykh, the head of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Kurgan Region, was awarded the special rank of Major General of Police.

In October 2017, by the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, Ilinykh Oleg Vladimirovich was awarded the medal of the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, II degree. In the same year, for many years of impeccable service, a great contribution to ensuring the rule of law, law and order and public safety in the Russian Federation, he was awarded the Certificate of Honor of the Federation Council Federal Assembly Russian Federation.

In April 2018, by order of the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, he was awarded an award weapon - a Makarov pistol for achievements in operational activities and active work to strengthen law and order.

By Decree of the President of the Russian Federation No. 44 dated February 8, 2019, he was appointed Head of the Main Directorate for Countering Extremism of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

During the period of service, he was repeatedly encouraged by the leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. Married, has three sons. He has a sports qualification - a candidate master of sports in alpine skiing.

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