Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 7 – Despite Moscow’s
claims and the expectations of some others, Russia’s Anschluss of Crimea and its
invasion of the Donbass have not had an impact on the language rights of
Russian speakers in Ukraine and that the rights of that community are currently
“completely satisfied,” according to a survey of experts in Ukraine.
Yuliya Tishchenko of Kyiv’s
Independent Center for Political Research surveyed experts, about that issue as
part of a study on “Questions of Identity for Russian Speakers in Ukraine in
the Context of the Armed Conflict in the East of Ukraine” (qha.com.ua/ru/obschestvo/povliyal-li-konflikt-na-donbasse-na-otnoshenie-k-russkoyazichnim/163601/).
Eighty-five percent of those
surveyed, the sociologist says, were “Russian-speaking citizens and a
significant portion of them were ethnic Russians who consider Russian to be
their native language.” Among them were journalists, political analysts,
artists, and others of the same kind.
“The main task of the research,”
Tishchenko says, “was to find out whether there had been a change in the
understanding and attitude of Russian-speaking citizens of Ukraine after the
armed conflict in the East of Ukraine” and what Russian speakers expect to be
the course of developments in the future.
The study found, the sociologist
continues, that “90 percent of the respondents consider that the cultural
requirements of Russian-speakers are being satisfied.” Only ten percent say
that these requirements are either not being satisfied or are being satisfied
only partially at the present time.
Seventy percent say that no real
threat to Russians existed before the beginning of the conflict, despite Moscow’s
claims. And “20 percent of them are certain that the sense of a threat was
created by Russian media” rather than reflecting facts on the ground. Today, 80 percent say that Russian speakers
face no problems, while 16 percent say there are occasional ones.
Perhaps Tishchenko’s most
significant finding was the following: “Almost 90 percent of Russian speakers
consider that all citizens of Ukraine without exception and independent of
ethnic origin form a political nation.” Only seven percent say that this is not
the case and that Russian speakers and ethnic Russians feel themselves separate
from that nation.
More than 30 percent of the experts
surveyed said that in their view, “the large print runs of Russian-language
media” are the result of the influence of “the owners of businesses on language
policy” rather than anything else. And
two out of three added that trust in these media reflected judgments about the
positions and journalistic standards rather language.
Recently, QHA says in reporting this
study, the Ukrainian state Committee on TV and Radio Broadcasting called on the
culture ministry to work toward an improvement in laws about language so that
Ukrainian will spread to more groups of the population. In the absence of such
laws, the committee suggested, there will be a “creeping” spread of Russian.
No comments:
Post a Comment