Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 23 – Gagauzia’s
representative in Tiraspol says that his autonomous republic wants a voice in
talks about the future status of Transdniestria and also on whether Chisinau
orients Moldova toward Europe or the Russian Federation. He further warns that
if Moldova unites with Romania, Gagauzia will declare its independence.
In a 3500-word article on the Moscow
site, Materik.ru, Ivan Burgudzhi, the chairman of the human rights commission
of the Popular Assembly of Gagauzia who represents that autonomy in
Transdniestria says that Chisinau’s failure to live up to its 1994 agreement
with Komrat forces Gagauzia to make these demands (materik.ru/rubric/detail.php?ID=16183).
Burgudzhi
argues that Gagauzia made a fundamental error in signing its agreement with
Chisinau in December 1994 and accepting the terms of a subsequent Moldovan law,
when it sacrificed its drive for independence in exchange for Moldovan
recognition of its special status, because Moldova did not fulfill the
provisions of that agreement.
Over
the last 18 years, he suggests, that Moldovan failure has given Chisinau rather
than Komrat control over all spheres of life in Gagauzia and led to “discrimination
against the Gagauz, a small people who nowhere in the world have their own
statehood” by depriving them of
corporate representation in the Moldovan government.
That
situation can no longer be tolerated, Burgudzhi continues. “The Gagauz do not
trust and cannot trust the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova where there is
no representation of Gagauzia.” Nor can
the Gagauz trust the executive power in Chisinau or its representatives in
Komrat, the capital of Gaguzia.
According to Burgudzhi, in the early 1990s,
there were “three independent sovereign states” on the territory of what had
been the Moldovan SSR: the Gagauz Republic, the Transdniestr Moldovan Republic,
and the Republic of Moldova.
“The
international community as always acted selectively and recognized only the
Republic of Moldova” rather than all three, the Gagauz official says, “even
though the sovereignty of the Republic of Moldova did not extend to the
territories of the Gagauz and Transdniestr Republics” and even though Chisinau
did not control their lands.
Encouraged by this outside support, Burgudzhi says, “the
bureaucratsof the organs of power and administration of the Republic of Moldoca
cannot yet recognize and understand that the status of a territorial autonomy
like Gagauzia bears not an administrative character [alone] but is by its
nature political.”
Such
attitudes are reflected in Chisinau’s approach both to Transdniestria and to
Moldova’s foreign relations. With regard to the former, the Moldovan government
is negotiating about the future of “the so-called Transdniestria problem”
without the involvement of Gagauzia and despite its clear interest in that
issue.
Indeed,
according to the Moscow memorandum of May 8, 1997, Burgudzhi says, Gagauzia’s
right to be a participant in the talks was explicitly recognized.
And
with regard to the latter, Chisinau has failed to obtain Gagauz sanction for
its tilt toward Europe rather than towards the Russian Federation, and some of
its leaders have expressed their desire to see Moldova unite with Romania. Both
of these approaches are unacceptable to Komrat, Burgudzhi says.
Chisinau
needs to organize a referendum on the former, and it needs to know in advance that
if Moldova tries to combine with Romania, then, according to the terms of the
1994 agreement, Gagauzia “has the right to self-determination” and would move
quickly, in Burgudzhi’s view, to declare independence and seek international
recognition.
Burgudzhi’s
statement is important not so much because of what it says about the Gagauz, a
small Christian Turkic people who live intermixed with Moldovans in the
southeastern portion of Moldova and who have few prospects for independence, than about what it indicates
concerning the strategy of Transdniestria and the Russian Federation.
Both
Tiraspol and Moscow have sought to bring ever more pressure on Chisinau to make
concessions to Transdniestrian autonomy or even to accept the loss of this
territory either to Ukraine, to the Russian Federation, or to some kind of
Slavic union state. And both are only
too pleased to involve Gagauzia and the aspirations of some of its leaders in
this effort.
Most
international players have forgotten about the Gagauz if they ever remembered
them, but the statement of the Gagauz representative in Tiraspol shows that
Tiraspol and behind it Moscow have not and are quite prepared to put this
numerically small people in play not for its own sake but as part of a much
larger game.
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