Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 5 – The Syrian
crisis, which gave Vladimir Putin a much-celebrated diplomatic victory, now
threatens Russia’s territorial integrity
not because Russian citizens are among the combatants in Syria but because
Moscow’s mishandling of the Circassian issue in the Middle East is radicalizing
the Circassian republics of the North Caucasus.
Circassian activists have long been
concerned about the fate of their co-ethnics in Syria and especially about the failure
of the Russian government to extend the rights of return and resettlement to
the Circassians that are specified in Moscow’s compatriots program (windowoneurasia.blogspot.com/2008/11/window-on-eurasia-circassians-call-for.html).
The Russian government has dragged
its feet in this regard at least in part because it does not want to see an
influx of Circassians into the North Caucasus, something that could
dramatically change the ethnic balance in that region – there are more than
five million Circassians abroad but only half a million now in the Russian
Federation.
Moscow has been especially leery of
helping Circassians return in the run-up to the Sochi Olympiad, an event
Circassians overwhelmingly oppose because it is slated to occur on the site of
the tsarist genocide of the Circassians in 1864. And the Russian authorities also fear that a
Circassian return could undermine existing ethno-territorial arrangements in
the North Caucasus.
But however much the Russian
government may have hoped to avoid such a development, the deepening violence
in Syria and its impact on the Circassians living there has begun to radicalize
official opinion in the Circassian republics of the North Caucasus and to
prompt them to demand that Moscow change course.
The latest and clearest evidence of
this is an appeal to the Russian Duma and Federation Council adopted last
Thursday by the parliament of the Republic of Kabardino-Balkaria concerning the
situation of Circassians in Syria and shortcomings in Russian law governing
their possible return (parlament-kbr.ru/index.php?Page=news&id=1165&idp=20).
In extremely polite and respectful
language that nonetheless makes their feelings clear, the republic’s
parliamentarians say that they share Moscow’s concerns about Syria and that
they are convinced that the situation there would only have gotten still worse
had it not been for the “peacemaking initiatives of President Vladimir Putin.”
But “at the same time,” the KBR
parliamentarians say, “the further escalation of the conflict in Syria and also
threats of the application of force by a number of states and the very fact of
the illegitimate interference from outside in the internal affairs of a sovereign
state can lead to new innocent victims including among our compatriots.”
“On the territory of Syria” today,
the declaration continues, “live more than 120,000 Circassians ho find
themselves in the most difficult conditions and are forced again to find
themselves refugees. Their natural
striving to return to their historical motherland is indivisibly connected with
concern over the security of the life and health of people and over the
preservtio of their uniqueness” as a people.
At the level of general principles,
Russian legislation on the right of compatriots to return to their homeland
recognizes this striving, but the Circassian legislators say, that law contains
a number of shortcoming that need to be corrected if the Circassians of Syria
are to be saved and to return to their North Caucasian homeland.
The Russian law of May 1999 fails to
define compatriot in a way that applies to those who have been outside their
homeland since the 18th and 19th centuries and who often
face enormous difficulties in proving the citizenship or subjecthood of their
ancestors. In addition, the law fails to define the category “nationality of
the Russian Federation” in an unambiguous way.
Moreover, although the law says that
compatriots should be allowed to obtain citizenship in the Russian Federation
in a simplified manner, arrangements for this have not been made except for
those, mostly ethnic Russians, who have been abroad for shorter periods and can
document their connection with the country more easily.
That has meant, the
Kabardino-Balkaria parliamentarians say, that “in a definite sense,the realization
of this State Program despite all its positive aspects has not completely
realized the rights of compatriots to the return to their historical
motherland.”
In addition, the KBR declaration
says, the people of that republic are convinced that Moscow must adopt federal
laws that clearly extend the rights of compatriots to Circassians (Adygeys)
living abroad and that strengthen the rights of labor migrants and their
families according to the 1975 International Labor Organization
recommendations.
Such steps will have “great humanitarian
significance for compatriots, make possible the establishment of conditions for
more intensify communication of compatriots living abroad with their historical
motherland, and boost the authority of Russia among compatriots,” the KBR parliamentarians
say.
Moscow thus faces a Hobson’s choice:
if it refuses to take the steps the KBR parliamentarians have called for, opinion
in the Circassian republics of the North Caucasus will radicalize, something
President Putin clearly wants to avoid at all costs at least until the Sochi
Olympiad is over.
But if Moscow does agree to do what the
Circassians want in this regard, the Russian authorities will face new demands
for redrawing the ethnic borders of the North Caucasus to create a unified
Circassian state, a move that beyond any doubt would lead to the further decay
of Russian control over not only that nation but over the other peoples of that
region.
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