Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 17 – Riza Asanov,
president of the Warsaw-based Crimean Foundation, has sent an open letter to
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov demanding that Moscow end what she calls
“the hybrid genocide” of her nation, the Crimean Tatars, in the Russian-occupied
Ukrainian peninsula.
Having just returned from Crimea, he
writes, she found that the situation there is diametrically opposite to the
descriptions Lavrov and other Russian officials have given and that she feels
compelled as an independent Crimean Tatar activist to try to set the record
straight (qha.com.ua/krimskie-tatari-polshi-obratilis-k-glave-mid-rossii-143106.html).
It is clear “to the unaided eye”
that the Crimean Tatars have been reduced to the status of second class
citizens in their homeland. To give but one example, in a school where Crimean
Tatars are 40 percent of the pupils, the authorities have banned instruction in
their national language -- despite Crimean Tatar having been declared a state
language on the peninsula.
The “polite” people Moscow talks
about have become crude and violent executors of state power against the
Crimean Tatars, harassing those who display the Crimean flag and opening
criminal cases without cause against them and indeed randomly at members of the
Crimean Tatar community.
Even as it is keeping Mustafa
Cemilev from coming to his homeland, Russia is punishing his son for a crime he
is alleged to have committed not in Russia but in Ukraine, although it finds
ways to avoid having one of its soldiers who killed an Armenian family held
responsible for his actions and even as it gives award to Russians for doing
what Crimean Tatars are subject to criminal charges.
The Russian authorities refused to
give permission for the Crimean Tatars to mark their national holiday, and when
the Crimean Tatars went ahead anyway, the occupation forces sent helicopters
over the venue in order to drown out the speeches of those taking part. They have forced Crimean Tatars to leave
their government jobs and forced others to flee.
“In front of everything the Russian
Federation is doing, one can add the word ‘hybrid’” including “hybrid
dismissals,” “hybrid judicial action,” and “hybrid deportation.” Tragically, it
is now time to speak about “hybrid genocide” against the Crimean Tatars who
only want to live in their own homeland.
That is because, Asanov writes, “we do
not see our future without the Motherland. [But] unfortunately, “you see the
future of Crimea without the Crimean Tatars.”
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