Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 29 – The Russian
authorities are doing everything they can -- from threatening Crimean Tatars
living in occupied Crimea to setting up a pocket organization of Crimean Tatars
they control to appealing to the Turkish government -- in an unsuccessful
attempt to block the World Congress of Crimean Tatars from meeting in Ankara.
This set of actions, coming on top
of continuing Russian oppression of that community – see the new report by the
monitoring group of the Congress of National Communities of Ukraine at eajc.org/data//file/Xenophobia_in_Ukraine_Jan_Jun_2015.pdf – show how
important the Crimean Tatars are in Moscow’s eyes and how paranoid the Russian
side is about them.
Despite Russian threats and appeals,
Refat Chubarov, the head of the Crimean Tatar Mejlis, says that preparations
for the congress, which is to open later this week with “about 200 Crimean
Tatar public organizations” represented, is “successfully being completed” (ru.krymr.com/content/article/27155454.html).
Crimean Tatar
organizations from Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Canada, Lithuania, Poland,
Russia, Romania, Turkey, France and other European countries will be
represented, Chubarov said. From
Ukraine, about 200 people plan to attend, of whom 100 live in Crimea, but the
Russian occupiers are doing what they can to keep them from going.
Nariman Dzhelal, the first deputy
chairman of the Mejlis, says that the Russians are trying to frighten them by
suggesting that if they go, they won’t be allowed back or will be prosecuted
for “extremism” if they sign on to any declaration that Crimea is not
legitimately part of the Russian Federation.
Some may be dissuaded as a result of these
“conversations,” he said, while others may choose to attend as observers rather
than participants so as to lessen any charges the Russian occupiers might bring
on their return.
“Our people,” he continues, “which returned to Crimea at the price of an enormous number of victims and using only democratic forms of struggle and non-violent methods in this very dangerous period has the right to appeal to the international community and hope for solidarity.”
Another device Moscow is using to try to undercut the World Congress is the formation of its own organization, Kyrym, which is headed by the pro-Moscow deputy speaker of the Crimean State Council Remzi Ilyasov. His group has called on Turkish leaders not to attend the meeting and warned those who plan to attend that they should think about members of their families.
That threat, Mustafa Cemilev, the Ukrainian president’s plenipotentiary for Crimean Tatar affairs, says that Ilyasov should be charged with violating the Ukrainian criminal code for making threats of that kind. He and other Crimean Tatars reject the notion that Moscow has any chance of blocking the Congress or causing the Crimean Tatars to change their principled objection to the Russian occupation of their homeland.
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