Revolutionary tribunal (Russia)
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Revolutionary tribunals (commonly abbreviated as revtribunals) in Soviet Russia were established soon after the October Revolution by the Soviet "Decree of the Soviet of Peoples' Commissars on the Court No. 1" ("Декрет о суде № 1") of November 22 (N.S.: December 5), 1917. The decree proclaimed that the workers' and peasants' revolutionary tribunals were established "for the purpose of the struggle against counter-revolutionary forces and defend the revolution, as well as to struggle against marauders, and profiteers, sabotage and other abuses of merchants, industrialists, clerks and others". [1] The term was borrowed from the Revolutionary Tribunal of the French Revolution.
When Cheka was established next month, among its functions was handing the perpetrators over to revtribunals.
The new "Statute of Revolutionary Tribunals" of April 12, 1919 established the priority of revtribunals over people's courts and gave them unrestricted rights to set the measure of prosecution (repression). On October 21, 1919 the Special Revolutionary Tribunal was established within Vecheka to consider grave cases of profiteering, bribery and crimes of the office (должностные преступления). As the decree said, "in its considerations, the Special Revolutionalry Tribunal follows the interests of the revolution and is not bound by and forms of legal proceedings."[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Decree About the Court (Russian)
- ^ Yu.P.Titov, "Establishment of the System of Soviet Revolutionary Tribunals" («Создание системы советских революционных трибуналов»). Moscow, 1983

