Saturday, September 6, 2014

Window on Eurasia: Moscow Must Disband Crimean Tatar Mejlis or Face Disaster Across Russia, Milli Firka Activist Says


Paul Goble

 

            Staunton, September 6 – Moscow has no choice but to disband the Crimean Tatar Mejlis lest its existence become a model for the formation of similar organizations by other non-Russian minorities in the Russian Federation, a development that would put “a delayed action mine” under the continued existence of that country, according to a Milli Firka spokesman.

 

            The Russian occupation authorities have been tightening the noose around the Mejlis since the Anschluss, banning Mustafa Cemilev  Refat Chubarov from returning to their homeland, threatening its members and most recently increasing the punishments on any who meet with Cemilev or Refat.

 

                Most analysts and commentators have suggested that Moscow has been proceeding in this direction because the Mejlis remains committed to Crimea being part of Ukraine and thus calls attention to people on the peninsula and around the world to the illegitimate nature of Russia’s occupation.

 

            But in an article yesterday, Rinat Shaymardanov, a spokesman for the Milli Firka Party which is cooperating with the Russian occupation authorities, suggests that the real reason Moscow may be moving against the Mejlis has little to do with Crimea itself and far more with what could happen in Russia itself (islamio.ru/news/policy/mina_zamedlennogo_deystviya/).
 
             For 23 years, Shamardanov says, the Mejlis of “Cemilev and Chubarov” has existed as “an inalienable part of the Crimean-Ukrainian nomenklatura;” and because the status of its leaders, it has served as “untouchable as “a key link of Crimean and international corrupt schemas.”
 
            Since Crimea has been “reunited” with Russia, he continues, the Mejlis has done everything it can to sabotage Moscow’s policies there, opposing the reunification referendum, refusing to accept Russian passports, and speaking out against all the policy initiatives of Simferopol and Moscow.
 
            But despite that, at present, some are lobbying Russian officials in both Simferopol and Moscow to allow the Mejlis to continue to exist out of concerns that unless that happens, the Crimean Tatars will revolt or otherwise cause trouble, the Milli Firka spokesman says. Any move in that direction would be a terrible mistake both in Crimea and for Russia as a whole.
 
            In Crimea, he argues, the Mejlis is not the representative organ of a people as its supporters claim but “an artificial pseudo-state formation created by Ukraine for the harsh administration of a people by a stratum of a ‘national elite’ bought off with the final goal of that people’s assimilation and inclusion into a single Ukrainian nation.”
 
            Therefore, there is no reason to restore it or to fear that in the absence of its restoration the Crimean Tatars will revolt. Many of them, the Filli Firka spokesman says, support what Vladimir Putin and Simferopol are trying to do. They deserve support, not traitors to the Russian cause like Cemilev and Chubarov.
 
             But there is a more compelling reason, he suggests, not to “reanimate and legitimize” the Mejlis “in any form – the impact that would have as “a delayed action mine under the fundamental principles of the state organization of the Russian Federation.”
 
             “Russia is a multi-national country,” with some 200 peoples who are now developing “within the framework of existing” Russian laws and who are represented in the organs of power “through the political and government institutions” of that country. “None of them has a status” like the one the Mejlis claims – representative of a people rather than a territory.
 
           If the Russian authorities legitimated the Mejlis, does anyone think that “other peoples of Russia would not want to have their own analogous ‘representative organ?” And can one imagine the impact of the existence of a multitude of such institutions on the Russian Federation?
 
            By creating two hierarchies of recognized structures, territorial and ethnic, “on one and the same territory,” the authorities would be creating “the most terrible danger for Russia,” putting under its territorial integrity “a bomb of extraordinary destructive force capable in the shortest time to split up the Federation into petty national pieces.”
 
            “Do they understand this threat in the federal center?” Shaymardanov asks. “Do they recognize what a gigantic Trojan horse the backers of the Crimean Mejlis would be introducing into Russia?” And that question leads to another: “What forces are standing behind the project of the rebirth of the Crimean Mejlis?”
 
            Beneath the Milli Firka commentator’s somewhat hyperbolic tone, his article is noteworthy for three reasons: First, it suggests that there is enormous pressure within Moscow and Simferopol to come to terms with the Mejlis at least for public relations purposes and that the group’s opponents feel they must go all out to block such a move.
 
            Second, it highlights just how much influence the Mejlis has that anyone among the Russian occupiers would be thinking about any kind of olive branch to an organization which has been consistently pro-Ukrainian and anti-Russian.
 
            And third, it shows just how fragile Russia’s own ethnic situation is, given Shaymardanov’s suggestion that many non-Russian groups would like to follow the Mejlis’ lead and have representation for themselves on the basis of ethnicity rather than territory, an argument he would have been unlikely to have advanced were there not some basis for it.
 
            That Putin’s Anschluss of Crimea has brought Russia many problems is beyond question even if it has boosted for a time at least the poll numbers of the incumbent of the Kremlin. But the problem the Milli Firka spokesman points to could be the most serious of all – a direct threat to the existence of the Russian Federation as an integral state.
 

 

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