Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – It is often said
and with some justification that “Russian liberalism ends at the borders with
Ukraine” – that is, that Russian liberals support liberal values until it
becomes a question of Moscow’s dominance over non-Russians within and beyond the
borders of the Russian Federation and even over Russians who live beyond the
capital’s ring road.
All too often in the pursuit of
support among the Russian population, Russian liberals have supported the
imperialist and hyper-centralist positions of Vladimir Putin, promising only
that when they come to power, they will treat Russia’s neighbors and Russia’s
regions more generously.
But this past week, at the Free
Russia Forum in Vilnius, Russian liberals took a major step away from the
typically unacknowledged Moscow-centric view of the world that their
predecessors have so often reflected, adopting a declaration on Ukraine that
condemns Putin’s aggression and annexation and featuring a discussion of
regional interests within Russia.
The declaration (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=592A678B771F9)
reads as follows:
The Kremlin’s
aggression against Ukraine is an international crime.
Certain Russian
political and public activists have not decided to make a principled assessment
of the annexation of Crimea and Russian aggression in the east of Ukraine. The
Free Russia Forum considers it necessary to make such an assessment guided by
the criteria of law and morality.
The Kremlin’s war
against Ukraine violates the territorial integrity of Ukraine. The US Charter,
the Helsinki Final Act, the declaration on the founding of the CIS, the
Budapest memorandum, bilateral Russian-Ukrainian agreements, and the Russian
criminal code show that Moscow’s actions fall under the definition of
aggression given by the UN General Assembly.
The occupation and
annexation of the territory of Ukraine, accompanied by mass repressions against
Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians which have led to the loss of more than 10,000
lives has become a shameful blot on Russian history.
The war must be
immediately ended. Russian forces must be withdrawn from all the territory of
Ukraine, including Crimea and the Donbass, and the internationally recognized
Russian-Ukrainian border must be restored.
The future free
Russia will see to restore good-neighborly relations with Ukraine on the basis
of the principles of international law.
Vilnius
May 26, 2017
Perhaps equally important as an indication
in changes in the views of those who call themselves Russian liberals was a
panel at the Vilnius conference devoted to regional and ethnic issues within Russia
(freeingria.org/2017/05/predstaviteli-grazhdanskogo-dvizheniya-svobodnaya-ingriya-prinyali-uchastie-v-rabote-iii-foruma-svobodnoj-rossii-v-vilnyuse/).
The panel included representatives
of Russia’s regions and republics and featured calls for a new federation
treaty among the federal units rather than between them and Moscow as the current
one does and for an end to the Russian ban on regional parties so that the
peoples of the Russian Federation can advance their diverse interests.
No comments:
Post a Comment