Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 26 – Mudaris Galimzyanov,
a Tatar activist, has asked a Kazan court to order the Tatarstan government to
keep an official promise it met in 1999 to erect a statue in Kazan to those who
lost their lives in 1552 in the defense of Kazan against the forces of Ivan the
Terrible.
On February 26, 1999, the Tatarstan
council of ministers issued an order for such a statue; and in 2002, the
culture minister said that the rose stone needed for it had been imported from
Spain. But as Moscow has put more pressure on Kazan to avoid taking such a
step, the republic government has not acted (idelreal.org/a/30293742.html).
Galimzyanov’s
appeal is being supported by dozens of members of the All-Tatar Social Center
(VTOTs) who have offered a variety of additional documents showing that the
Tatarstan government made promises to erect a status and then did not follow
through (azatliq.org/a/30293088.html).
This
is the second time the Tatar activist has brought such a suit. He and VTOTs
president Yunus Kamaletdinov did so in 2012, but the district court in Kazan
rejected their request arguing that the February 1999 decision had never been
formally published and therefore was null and void.
The
2012 court also refused to accept as evidence to the contrary documents showing
that officials had acted on that order, designing the monument and purchasing
stone for its key element. The current appeal is based on evidence that until
2000, the Tatarstan council of ministers did not consider it necessary to
publish all its decisions.
Three things make
this case worthy of note. First, it is
an indication that national movements like those in Tatarstan are becoming legally
sophisticated and are now turning to the courts to try to achieve their goals.
Second, it shows the Tatars hope to mobilize people by calling attention to
decisions Kazan made and then backed down in the face of Russian pressure.
And third and most important, it is
a model of what national movements in other republics of the Russian Federation
are likely to copy, using the courts to call attention to the ways in which
their republic governments have reneged on their promises and using the
embarrassment that will cause to force them to live up to more of them.
As Moscow’s pressure on the
non-Russian republics intensifies, such legal actions may play an increasing
part of the strategy of the national movements, allowing them to use the legal
system itself against what Moscow wants. They may not win their cases; but even
if they don’t, they may win the battle of public opinion – and that may matter
more.
No comments:
Post a Comment