Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 18 – The two most
senior leaders of the Crimean Tatars, Mustafa Cemilev, the former leader of the
Mejlis, and Refat Chubarov, the current head of that body, say that many in
their nation fear that Moscow will try to deport them from their lands again
and insist that they will resist any such effort.
Cemilev told Ukraine’s Fifth Channel
that he and his fellow Crimean Tatars who were deported by Stalin in 1944 to
Central Asia “struggled for 50 years to return to their Motherland, and [that most
believe now that] it is better to die here than to be subjected again to
deportation” (nazaccent.ru/content/10983-krymskotatarskij-medzhlis-boitsya-novoj-deportacii-i.html).
Although he indicated that “a
peaceful resolution of the crisis in Crimea is not very probable,” the longtime
leader of the Crimean Tatars said that by themselves, “the Crimean Tatars do
not represent a force capable of declaring war on Russia and successfully
carrying it out.”
“We are few, and we don’t have
weapons,” he said. Moreover, the Crimean Tatars are very worried about
provocations against them. “But when your Motherland is occupied by foreign
soldiers, it is difficult to expect that everything will be peaceful.”
At the same time, the current Mejis leader clarified Cemilev’s remarks. His predecessor, Chubarov said, had not said that the Crimean Tatars would use violence or engage in jihad. “We are a minority” in Crimea, Chubarov said, and consequently, the Crimean Tatars hope to avoid violence but will defend themselves against provocations and deportation.
In other comments, Chubarov said
that the Crimean Tatars had not participated in the Moscow-organized “referendum”
because it was illegal, because it was held under Russian guns, and because it
was orchestrated in a hurry-up manner that precluded any serious debate of the
serious issues involved.
The Mejlis leader said that he and
his fellow Crimean Tatars “do not know” what the future will bring, but they
very much hope that the international community, the UN and the EU will adopt
decisions against any “injustice” that the Russians may inflict. “We as Crimean
Tatars do not intend to approve this injustice.”
Russian attitudes toward the Crimean
Tatars and Moscow’s possible plans for them remain unclear. Relations between
the Crimean Tatars and ethnic Russians on the peninsula have long been tense
because Russians oppose allowing Crimean Tatars to return and demand back the
property and land they were deported from.
But two comments this week are both
indicative and worrisome. Vladimir
Zorin, the deputy head of the Moscow Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, says
that the Mejlis had made “a big mistake” in not supporting the referendum on the
future status of the peninsula (nazaccent.ru/content/10967-ekspert-bojkot-referenduma-byl-bolshoj-oshibkoj.html).
The Moscow scholar says that the
Crimean Tatar leadership has proven “incapable of assessing the new historical
realities and understanding the attitudes of the majority of Crimean residents.”
The Crimean Tatars must work to get along with the others and not “revive evil
historical memory,” a reference to the wholesale deportation of 1944.
A second commentary, by Vladislav
Gulyevich, an analyst at Moscow State University’s Center for Conservative
Research, is more worrisome. He suggests that the Crimean Tatar movement, like the
Circassian movement in the Caucasus, was a “failed” project of Western
governments directed against Russia (regnum.ru/news/polit/1778717.html).
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