Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 5 – Speaking in
Russian-occupied Crimea, Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matvienko on
Friday gave the clearest sign yet that the Kremlin plans to expand its efforts
to mobilize Russians and Russian speakers in the former Soviet republics and
Baltic states, people she says are loyal to their new countries but remain
Russian compatriots.
Russia does not want any longer to “sit
quietly by and watch” as ethnic Russians and Russian speakers “in certain
former republics of the USSR” are subject to become objects of “oppression and
persecution” regarding their education and language rights, she insists (ria.ru/world/20160604/1442892185.html).
Matvienko says that “one can offer a
mass of example of discrimination” against them, adding that “we know what is
going on in this sphere in Latvia, Estonia and Ukraine,” as well as “in a
number of other countries” including Belarus and Moldova. All this is unacceptable,,
and “Russia has supported and will support its foreign compatriots.”
According to the Federation Council
head, “Russian compatriots beyond the borders of Russia wherever they live must
have the opportunity to preserve their ties with their historical motherland,
to study Russian language and culture, and to feel themselves to be Russian [‘russkiye’]
people.”
She adds that “in certain countries,”
governments and others are whipping up Russophobia and undertaking efforts to “isolate
their citizens from the great Russian culture” under the pretext that the
bearers of that culture are supposedly disloyal to the countries in which they
live.
“If one calls things by their right
names, this policy is unworthy,” Matvienko says. “There are large numbers of Russians
in Ukraine, in Belarus, Moldova and the Baltic countries … No one has ever
produced facts or examples of their disloyalty or their support of the
political and economic interests of Russia to the harm of the interests of the
countries where they live.”
Matvienko’s statement is breathtaking
in its flight from reality – she speaks of “the former republics of the USSR”
rather than the more normal locution “the republics of the former USSR,” for
example – but perhaps the most damning part of her remarks is that they took
place in a part of Ukraine where Moscow intervened in the name of helping
Russians against Kyiv.
No comments:
Post a Comment