Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 23 – Even as Chechens and Ingush around the world mark the 69th
anniversary of their deportation to Central Asia by Stalin, an act that cost
many of them their lives and that the European Parliament has declared an act
of genocide, some of their descendants face expulsion from European countries
back to the Russian Federation.
Given
that those returned to Russia now face a future that is uncertain at best given
Russian attitudes toward the Chechens and the nature of Ramzan Kadyrov’s regime
in Chechnya itself, Russian human rights activists Thursday evening began standing
watch at a Moscow airport to help some 15 of them (publicpost.ru/theme/id/3292/evropa_deportiruet_chechencev/).
Elena
Burtina of the Civic Cooperation organization said that her group did not know “what
awaits these people” once they are returned to Chechnya. She said that at least “some of the deported
Chechens may be kidnapped or possibly become victims of torture and
extra-judicial execution.”
Chechen
officials suggest that there are no such problems. An employee of the republic’s
Department for Foreign Relations, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that
last year, representatives of Norway, Sweden and Austria had come to Grozny and
were shown by Chechen officials that “life in the republic is reviving.”
He
added that Chechen leaders want these people returned from Europe because
official Grozny unanimously believes that “these people are creating a negative
image of Chechnya since they lie” about conditions there.
Svetlana
Gannushkina, the head of Civic Cooperation said that Europe wants to solve its
problems with immigrants by “inhuman methods” such as forcing them to return
even where there is a clear danger.
Austrian officials may believe in the “Potemkin village” that Grozny has
erected but only because “they prefer to think that everything is fine.
She
noted that “with the coming to power of Ramzan Kadyrov, it has been impossible
to monitor violations of human rights.
For example, if an individual whom the siloviki have seized and tortured
turns for help to rights activists, then not only he will suffer but also his
relatives. As a result, only a handful of [Chechens now] approach human rights
groups.”
Last
year, Gannushkina continued, Norway returned numerous Chechens to their
homeland. “We were not able to follow the fate of all the Chechens, but one of
them died under very strange circumstances. Those being returned are people who
still have not received the status of refugee.” That means they left Chechnya
quite recently and thus are in more danger.
The
situation for Chechens in Austria is especially dire, she suggested. There are approximately
25,000 Chechens living there. Most are adapting well, but Vienna is ever less
willing to provide them with refuge. Last year, the percentage of Chechens
receiving favorable responses to their request for refugee status fell from 94
percent to 31 percent.
Other
European countries may be about to follow the lead of Norway and Austria. Belgium is currently planning to expel a
Chechen family, according to reports in the Brussels media (lanouvellegazette.be/665617/article/regions/centre/actualite/2013-02-17/familleureux-une-famille-de-trois-enfants-expulsee).
The human tragedies lying behind
each of these cases are made worse by the fact that they are taking place
around today’s anniversary of Stalin’s expulsion of the Chechens and Ingush. As the Save Chechnya Campaign notes, the
Soviet dictator expelled almost half a million Chechens and Ingush, killing
many of them (www.savechechnya.org).
Moscow justified that the expulsion
of an entire people by claiming that the Chechens and Ingush had “collaborated
with the Germans,” but the historical record shows that some 40,000 Chechens
fought in the ranks of the Red Army, nearly 100 times as many as the 450 who served
in German-sponsored units.
Sixty
years after that event, the European Parliament declared that the deportation of
the Chechens to Central Asia and Siberia constituted “an act of genocide” under
the terms of both the Fourth Hague Convention of 1907 and the 1948 UN Convention
for the Prevention and Repression of the Crime of Genocide.
The
Save Chechnya Campaign this week issued an appeal to “all governments of
independent and democratic countries” that they follow the European Parliament
and that they establish a special international war cries court to examine that
crime and also the actions of the Russian government since 1991 against the
Chechens.
What
is taking place in Europe now suggests that few countries are now willing to
consider that possibility as a means of calling attention to and thus making
more difficult the repetition of crimes of this type not only in Chechnya but
elsewhere in the Russian Federation and around the world.
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