Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 25 – Because the
Tatars are the second largest nationality in the Russian Federation, because so
many of them live beyond the borders of the Republic of Tatarstan, and because
Kazan both officially and unofficially seeks to be a leader of the non-Russian nations
as a whole, the ways in which it has extended its influence are critical.
In the 1990s when Mintimir Shaymiyev
was president, that effort received enormous attention; since then, its efforts
have generally fallen below the radar screens of most. But a new report suggests that Kazan
continues to make them and with success on critical issues like dedovshchina,
the mistreatment of Tatars by Russians and others in the Russian Army.
Following a series of high-profile
cases of the abuse of Tatar draftees, the Kazan Human Rights Center in February
2007 prepared a list of nine Russian military units in which it was dangerous
for Tatar draftees to serve, Bulat Mukhamedzhanov, who worked in that office
and now coordinates the Zone of Law organization, says (idelreal.org/a/30291354.html).
The government of the
Republic of Tatarstan via the military commissariats then asked the Russian Army
“not to send its draftees to units on this ‘black list,’” he continues, an
effort that, together with the reduction in the time of service for draftees
from two years to 18 months and then one year, significantly reduced the problem.
But the situation also improved,
Mukhamedzhanov says, when republic activists gave cellphones to draftees with
the possibility to make free calls to Tatarstan’s military commissariat to report
cases of abuse. Military commanders sometimes confiscated these phones, but
Shaymiyev intervened and Moscow ultimately ordered them to stop doing so.
In addition, senior Tatarstan
officials routinely travelled to nearby military units whenever they heard of
problems; and beginning in 2010, when Sariya Saburskaya became human rights
plenipotentiary for the republic, this increased. This impressed soldiers from
other republics: “We see,” they said, what happens with your guys: Tatarstan
defends them!”
As a result of these actions by
Tatarstan, the rights activist says, “step by step,” Kazan has “reduced to ‘nothing’
the problem of arbitrary treatment” of its soldiers in the army. This success,”
Mukhamedzhanov continues, “could be used for the resolution of [other] serious
problems such as home violence, medical mistakes and the like.”
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