Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 5 – For more than a
year, Russians have failed to take note of and react to the fact that “their
government is dealing with the Crimean Tatars in the same way Hitler’s Reich
did,” reducing them to the status of second class citizens and outcasts in
their own land, according to Ayder Muzhdabayev.
But what is especially disturbing, a
Crimean Tatar who works as Moscow journalist and commentator says, is that it
is “not only the representatives (supporters) of the authorities, but also its
opponents,” a pattern that raises questions about whether Russia has any chance
of recovering and improving (echo.msk.ru/blog/aiderm/1524336-echo/).
Since the Russian annexation of
Crimea a year ago, he writes, “governments, international organizations, and
concerned citizens of various countries have been protesting against the
intensifying discrimination there of the Crimean Tatars and demanded an end to
repressions.”
“Only in one country is nothing of
the sort heard,” Muzhdabayev says, and this is Russia. That the regime might
take this position is one thing but that almost everyone should do so is quite
another. And that means that the words
“’opposition’ and ‘intelligentisa’” must now “not be written except in
quotation marks.”
In a country of 140 million people,
one can hardly find ten who are prepared to defend the Crimean Tatars in public,
the journalist says, noting that “practically all my Moscow ‘friends’” not only
do nothing on their own but don’t “like” or “repost” his or other articles on
the subject in social media.
That raises serious questions about
them. After all, “on the territory of
their country, an entire people is being made into second-class citizens.
People are being deprived of the chance to listen to the radio and watch
television in their own language, and their children are losing this right even
with regard to films!”
“People are being intimidated. Some are
disappearing, others are sitting in jails, and the rest are simply crying at
home from fear, injustice and despair,” Muzhdabayev writes. “No one (at least
not yet) is threatened with punishment for expressing sympathy to the Crimean
Tatars.” But still almost no Russians are doing so.
That failure to speak out raises
serious questions about the Russians and means that “even if the Crimean Tatars
begin to be deported from their homeland as they were in 1944 in cattle cards,”
there won’t be more than “two or three posts on Russian Facebook” – a lack that
makes that horrific prospect all the more possible.
But it is not only the Crimean
Tatars who are being brutalized by the Russian occupation authorities in
Crimea. Today, Novy Region-2 journalist
Kseniya Kirillova tells the heart-rending story of a Ukrainian citizen there who
is being victimized only because she has reposted materials critical of what
Moscow is doing (nr2.com.ua/hots/Okkupacija_Kryma/Boyus-ya-etogo-ne-perezhivu-FSB-obvinili-v-ekstremizme-bolnuyu-vdovu-93919.html).
Galina
Denisova is a citizen of Ukraine who has refused Russian citizenship because
she doesn’t support Russia’s occupation of the Ukrainian peninsula. On occasion,
Kirillova reports, the Sevastopol resident has reposted stories in support of
Crimea as a Ukrainian territory, Nadezhda Savchenko and the late Boris Nemtsov.
Not
long ago, the FSB searched her house and said they were bringing charges
against her for “extremism” on the basis of a social network post she put up in
august 2014. Denisova said she couldn’t remember the content of that post but
now faces charges and a trial in a Russian court.
“I
am afraid that I will not survive as my health is weak,” she posted at the end
of last week. The FSB search left her
frightened and intimidated because, she says, “the Chekists clearly gave her to
understand that they would not allow her to leave the country;” and she doesn’t
have any money for a lawyer.
Denisova said
that she is “an unemployed widow with two small children.” Now, she is “afraid
and almost doesn’t leave her home.” She
doesn’t know what to do because after the search, “the FSB forced her to sign a
paper that she would not write any more such posts.” She said she did so
because she was afraid of what would happen to her children if she didn’t.
Now, except for
her contacts on Facebook, she concluded, “I am entirely alone.”
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