Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 14 – For most of
Soviet times, Western commentators, to the extent they dealt with the issue at
all, assumed that those ethnic communities inside the USSR which the West
ignored were most at risk of repression because Moscow could act without fear
of international repercussions.
That was true then and remains true
now but only under one condition: the attention from the Western world must be
sustained at a high level. Indeed, under
Vladimir Putin, those which have attracted a large amount of attention in the West
and then lost it are most at risk because the Kremlin leader views them as “agents”
of the West and thus prime candidates for repression.
Among all the nations inside the
borders of the Russian Federation or occupied by Russian forces, the two that
fall into the category of having attracted enormous attention at one point and
then less attention after a time are the Circassians in the North Caucasus and
the Crimean Tatars whose homeland is on the Ukrainian peninsula.
Prior to the Sochi Olympics, few
beyond the specialist community paid much attention to the large Circassian
population in the North Caucasus (500,000) and in the Middle East (more than
five million); but thanks to the work of Circassian activists in both the
homeland and the diaspora, the world came to know the history of this proud
people.
Not only did the Circassians resist
Russian aggression far longer than any other people eventually absorbed into
the empire, but they took their military traditions with them when the Russian
government expelled them in 1864 and have become important leaders of the
security services in many Middle Eastern countries.
Putin was anything but pleased with
the attention they attracted during the run-up to the Sochi Games, but he was
constrained by it from acting against this nation. Indeed, in order to muddy
the waters in his best “hybrid” fashion, the Kremlin leader even made certain
concessions to them and promised more.
But unfortunately and despite new
and compelling reasons for paying attention to this nation – many of its
members are attempting to flee from war-torn Syria and have been blocked from
returning to their ancestral homeland – international attention has
flagged. Circassian activists continue
to speak out, but they no longer have the “peg” the Olympics represented to tie
stories about them to and thus are getting less and less media and political attention.
Because of that and because of their
actions earlier, Circassians appear to have become a target for Putin’s
increasing repression. And his crackdown on them is likely to increase because
he believes they deserve punishment for what they did earlier and he is
convinced that they will see that this time around the West will ignore them –
and feel compelled to turn to him.
The Crimean Tatars tragically are in
a similar position. They have resisted Soviet and Russian repression, suffered
deportation and as a result of their own actions at the end of Soviet times and
since then partially succeeded in returning to their homeland on the Ukrainian
peninsula.
They were also the most consistent
opponents of the illegal Russian Anschluss of their land; and for that reason,
they captured the imagination of many around the world, with stories about the
Crimean Tatars a regular feature of Western television and the print media
whenever Ukraine and Russian aggression was discussed.
But now, while Western outlets still
talk about the need for Russia to return Crimea to Ukraine, they speak less and
less about the Crimean Tatars – and Moscow has responded in the same way it has
to the Circassians after the West began to ignore them against after the Sochi
Games were over.
Russian repression of the Crimean
Tatars has been far better documented than has Russian repression against the
Circassians, thanks to the work of a remarkable group of Crimean Tatar and
Ukrainian journalists and activists and the fact that Russian repressions in
Crimea have been so outlandish and brutal.
But their stories which appear in
the Ukrainian media and the Internet all too often are not picked up by the
mainstream media in Western countries.
Putin can see this and consequently assumes he can act with ever greater
brutality, confident that he won’t be called on this in any serious way.
The fewer stories about the
Circassians and the Crimean Tatars that appear, the more confident he will be
that he can get away with his authoritarian actions. The only way he can be stopped is for the
West to begin paying more attention to both these peoples and others in the new
Russian empire.
Western media outlets and
governments have a double obligation for doing so: On the one hand, it is a
simple matter of morality to defend the weak victims against the often vicious
strong. And on the other, earlier Western coverage helped make these people
targets of Russian repression. Only more coverage of them has a chance of
stopping Putin’s moves against them.
No comments:
Post a Comment