Paul Goble
Staunton,
June 16 – A report by an group of Turkish human rights activists about the
situation in occupied Crimea and given to Vladimir Putin by Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, says that the Crimean Tatar language rights exist “only
on paper” and that the Russians have no real plans to end that or other rights
abuses.
As
a result, Professor Zafer Uskul, who led the delegation, told the Anatolian
News Agency that international human rights organizations must get involved to
end these Russian abuses of the rights of Crimean Tatars and other residents of
the Ukrainian peninsula (trt.net.tr/russian/из-российского-и-турецкого-мира/2015/06/15/турецкая-делегация-обнародовала-доклад-о-правах-человека-в-крыму-258489).
During
a four-day visit to Crimea, the Turkish rights activists met with
representatives of the Mejlis, the media, religious leaders, NGO activists, and
ordinary citizens. Uskul said that
throughout, they were tailed by officials of the occupation government. “It was
clear that they did not want us to meet with those who are opposed to them.”
After the Anschluss, Putin personally declared that
Crimean Tatar would be the third official language alongside Russian and
Ukrainian on the peninsula, but that declaration remains “on paper.” Crimean Tatar media have been harassed and
closed; no one can post an ad in that language, and Crimean Tatar is now taught
in only 15 schools, not the 200 that nation requires.
The
occupiers say that this is not a problem because “all the residents of the republic
know Russian,” Uskul continued.
The
Turkish activist also discussed the authorities attack on the Mejlis and its
leaders, restrictions on Crimean Tatar media, warrantless searches of Crimean
Tatar homes, medrassahs and mosques, and the failure of officials to
investigate disappearances and to bring those responsible to justice.
But
perhaps Uskul’s finding was made in the course of a conversation he had with
representatives of the Institute for Human Rights in Crimea before he visited
the peninsula. Its officials, he said,
admitted that there were problems but dismissed them as part of the transition and
that “all problems would be solved in time.”
The
Turkish professor and rights activist said that it is clear “there is no
definite plan” and therefore the only hope will be if international human
rights organizations and third countries get involved. The Crimean Tatars “need
and deserve such protection,” he continued, and they have the right to expect
it.
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