Staunton, February 24 – The
Unrecognized Nations and Peoples Organization, which was founded by among
others the late Estonian scholar Linnart Mäll and played a key role in the
national movements within the USSR at the end of that empire’s existence,
continues to be a thorn in the side of the Russian government.
On the one hand, Moscow has worked
very hard and, in many cases, successfully to force activists from territories
under its control to leave the group, IdelReal’s Ramazan Alpaut says. But on
the other, the group continues to issue damning reports on Russian government
actions in occupied Crimea and against the non-Russians in Russia (idelreal.org/a/30441359.html).
The group was formally established
in the Hague in February 1991 by representatives of Australian aborigines,
Armenia, the Crimean Tatars, Eastern Turkestan Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Tibet,
Taiwan, Tatarstan, Abkhazia, Assyria, and other groups without their own
statehood who are oppressed by others.
While it remains committed to
representing the unrepresented and to the defense of the rights of such groups,
its membership has changed over time as some have gained independence and
others have been subject to even more intense pressure from the states within
whose borders they exist.
At present, Alpaut reports, there
are approximately 40 members, including Abkhazia, Eastern Turkestan, Southern
Azerbaijan, Catalonia, the Lezgins and the Crimean Tatars. Significantly, none
of the peoples of the Middle Volga are represented, “although this was not
always the case,” the journalist and commentator says.
The Tatars and Maris were
represented in it from 1991 to 2008, the Udmurts from 1993 to 2013, the Chuvash
from 1993 to 2008, and the Bashkirs from 1996 to 1998. Other peoples within the current borders were
also represented but no longer are, either because they can’t afford the dues
or in most cases because Moscow doesn’t want them in.
The Buryats were members from 1996
to 2010, the Chechens from 1991 to 2010 the Circassians from 1994 to 2015, the
Ingush from 1994 to 2008, the Tuvans from 1996 to 2009, the Sakha from 1993 to
1998, and the Kumyks from 1997 to 2008. Of peoples within Russia, only the Lezgins
of Daghestan are still members.
But if Moscow has been successful in
forcing the non-Russians out of UNPO, it has not been able to block the organization
from issuing statements decrying its repression. Among those were UNPO’s
findings that Russia was behind the death of Crimean Tatar activist Vedzhe
Kashka (unpo.org/article/21748) and that Moscow’s language policy violates
international norms (unpo.org/article/21003).
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