Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 21 – As often
happened at the end of Soviet times and the beginning of the 1990s, the
Republic of Sakha has followed the position laid out first by the Republic of
Tatarstan and accused Moscow of violating the Russian constitution and
threatening the country’s national security by seeking to push out non-Russian
languages from public schools.
Several weeks ago, senior officials
in Kazan denounced the new Russian concept paper on instruction in Russian and
said in an open letter to Moscow that unless the Russian government changed
course, its actions would spark protests among non-Russians across the country
(windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/12/tatarstan-says-moscow-violating-russian.html).
Now, Ivan Shamayev, a deputy of the
Sakha Republic’s state council, has said the same thing in equally sharp terms in
n open letter to Sergey Naryshkin, the chairman of the Russian State Duma (nazaccent.ru/content/18806-yakutskij-deputat-uvidel-v-koncepcii-prepodavaniya.html).
According to the Sakha deputy, the
draft concept paper “violates federal laws concerning education and languages
and contradicts the direction of the [Russian Federation] Strategy for
Nationality Policy.” If Moscow does not change direction, the measure will “detonate
an explosion which will harm the federal arrangements of our state.”
Shamayev argues that the new draft
program has as its goal “the destruction” of the 4,000 non-Russian schools in
the country. He concedes that non-Russians should learn Russian as well, but he
insists that their right to study their own languages must not be abridged
under any circumstances.
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