Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 25 – Not only have
the Crimean Tatars become “the main problem for Russia” on the peninsula,
Aleksey Makarkin says, because of their opposition to unification with Russia,
but they represent an issue that won’t be resolved anytime soon and thus are
something that “will create ever more problems” in the future.
Makarkin, first vice president of
the Moscow Center for Political Technologies and a frequent commentator on
developments in the region, says that this situation should not surprise anyone
given that “a large part of the Crimean Tatar community sees Russia as a threat”
because of that community’s “tragic history” (politcom.ru/print.php?id=17367).
In 1944, Stalin deported the Crimean
Tatars for supposed collaboration with the Germans, a process in which between
a quarter and a half of all of them died, and suppressed the Crimean Tatar
Autonomous Republic. Under Khrushchev, Crimea was transferred to Ukraine but
the Crimean Tatars “unlike the majority of ‘repressed peoples’ did not get
permission to return to their motherland.”
That decision apparently reflected
less a judgment about their supposed “’guilt’” than concerns about “the
strategic and poltical importance of Crimea in which there were both resorts of
all-union importance and a base for the Black Sea Fleet,” Makarkin says. But it
sparked a national movement, led by Mustafa Cemilev, which demanded the right
of return.
In
1974, the Brezhnev government “formally lifted the ban” on the right of Crimean
Tatars to live in Crimea, but the Communist authorities using the propiska system
and other means did everything they could to block the return of the Crimean
Tatars from their exile in Central Asia.
As
Makarkin notes, “the massive return” of members of this nation “took place only
in 1989.” By the 2001 Ukrainian census,
there were 243,433 Crimean Tatars in Crimea. Now, there are an estimated
300,000, although there are nearly an equal number still living in their places
of exile.
On
their return, the Crimean Tatars set up their own system of
self-adminsitration, although it was not recognized by the Ukrainian
government. They created a parliament or
Kurultay which has had as its executive organ the Mejlis, a body which in
Makarkin’s words “considers itself a forerunner of a government structure.”
In addition, the returning Crimean Tatars came into conflict
with the local ethnic Russians who had moved in and seized Crimean Tatar lands
after the deportation. Efforts by the
Crimean Tatars to recover them, including occupying some plots, sparked fights
with Russians who felt that they had a right to the land.
The
Ukrainian authorities did not help the situation. On the one hand, they did not
extend the right of automatic Ukrainian citizenship to Crimean Tatars who were
not on Ukrainian territory on the day of zero-option. And on the other, over two decades, Kyiv wasn’t
able to adopt a law on the rehabilitation of the Crimean Tatars.
Only
on March 20, five days ago, when Russia had already occupied Crimea and the
writ of Ukraine did not de facto extend to the peninsula, did the Ukrainian parliament
recognize the Crimean Tatarss as an indigenous people of Ukraine and the Melis
and Kurultay as the plenipotentiary organs of power for that community.
It
is not the case, however, that Kyiv did nothing earlier, Makarkin points
out. In the mid-1990s, Ukrainian
President Leonid Kuchma created a Council of Representatives of the Crimean
Tatar People, to advise him. Its members were drawn from the Mejlis and
included until November 2013 Cemilev, and sinc that time Refat Chubarov.
Cemilev,
as Makarkin notes, “historically was closely connected witht eh Ukrainian
national movement.” Not surprisingly, the Mejlis supported the Orange
Revolution of 2004, but that event led to a split in the Crimean Tatar
movement, a split that continues to this day and may play a major role while
Crimea is under Russian control.
In
2006, a group of Crimean Tatars re-established the the Milli Firka party.
Unlike the Mejlis, it quickly gained official recognition in Kyiv, although it
did not receive much support from Crimean Tatars. Nonetheless, in 2010, then Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovich made its representatives rather than those of the
Mejlis the members of the consultative council.
The
Mejlis responded by boycotting the council, something that exacerbated
divisions among the Crimean Tatars, Makarkin says. One manifestation of this
was the support the Mejlis gave in February 2014 to the Maidan opponents of
Yanukovich, and another was the Mejlis’ increasing clashes with the ethnic
Russian government in Crimea itself.
That
government did not include a single Crimean Tatar. One vice prime minister, whom the authorities
suggested was a Crimean Tatar, Rustam Temirgaliyev, is in fact a Kazan Tatar
and the son of the leader of the Idel Association of Volga Tatars. That
reinforced the conclusion of most Crimean Tatars that their future must be part
of Ukraine, not of Russia.
In
an attempt to counter that, the Russian government of the peninsula on March 11
promised the Crimean Tatars 20 percent of the positions in all legislative and
executive organs, declared the Crimean Tatar would be one of the three official
languages of the peninsula, created a new program for repatriation, and even recognized
the Kurultay as a representative body.
This
de facto recognition of the Kurultay and the Mejlis meant, Makarkin says, that “the
Russian authorities intend to develop relations with the majority part of the
Crimean Tatar community despite the fact that the latter is anything but an
easy partner.” Indeed, that section of the Crimean Tatars is clearly opposed to
Russian rule.
That
has led to discussions, in public and perhaps behind the scenes, of the possibility
that Moscow and Sevastopol will shift their focus to the “minority” or Milli
Firka part of the Crimean Tatars, especially since one of its leaders, unlike the
heads of the Mejlis, called on Crimean Tatars to take part in the
Russian-imposed “referendum.”
The
problem with the second variant is the Mejlis retains the loyalty of most
Crimean Tatars and the size of the Milli Firka means that it will be very
difficult for Moscow and Sevastpol to find enough cadres from within it to fill
all the positions that it would have to in order to live up to its promises.
Both
Kazan and the Kremlin got involved and tried to convince Cemilev to switch
sides, most famously in the telephone call between Vladimir Putin and the
Crimean Tatar national leader. But
Cemilev held firm in his commitment to Ukraine and the talks “led to nothing,” Makarkin
says.
Instead,
Cemilev reached out to Turkey and the West and maintained his opposition to the
so-called referendum. According to his
Milli Firka opponents, some 40 percent of Crimean Tatars voted in the
referendum with a quarter of them supporting integration with Russia. But according to Cemilev, “not even one
percent” of the Crimean Tatars did so.
The
truth, the Moscow commentator suggests, is probably somewhere in between, but
it is obvious that the Crimean Tatars do not overwhelmingly support the
inclusion of Crimea into the Russian Federation as Moscow has claimed.
Moreover, a demand that the Crimean Tatars take Russian passports or become
migrants on their own land hasn’t helped Russia either.
This
Saturday, March 29, the Kurultay is slated to discuss what the majority of
Crimean Tatars should do next. One possibility is that it will call for a
referendum among the Crimean Tatars, although how the Russian authorities would
react to that is very much an open question, Makarkin says.
In
the view of the Moscow commentator, “the Mejlis does not intend to enter into a
head’s on conflict with the Russian authorities because it understands that
this could lead to tragic consequences.” Cemilev has said that he “does not
exclude” the possibility that the Crimean Tatas could take Russian passports, “although
he has compared them with the Nazi-required ‘Ausweis,” something that will
infuriate many in Moscow.
But
whatever happens on Saturday, there are more problems ahead for Moscow with the
Crimean Tatars, and these are not limited to political, historical or land
issues. One of them that is obvious: the
Crimean Tatars use Latin script for their language, something which Russian law
prohibits.
Moreover
and probably more explosive, Russian laws which are being extend to Crimea
include a prohibition on any calls for “’the violation of the territorial integrity of the Russian Federation,’” an offense
Crimean Tatars could be charged with if they suggest in public that Crimea is
and should remain part of Ukraine.
And
finally, Makarkin says, Russia faces a difficult balancing act because if it
makes too many concessions to the Crimean Tatars to encourage their loyalty to
Moscow, that will only enrage local ethnic Russians who don’t think the
opponents of the Anschlus should be in any way rewarded.
Consequently,
the Moscow analyst says, “the Crimean Tatar issue is hardly going to be
resolved in the near term. On the contrary and more likely, it is going to give
birth to ever new problems” that will complicate the Russian government’s life
in the peninsula and perhaps more broadly.
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