29.01.2003 11:50
                                                                                                     
ROGOZIN SLAMS LORD JUDD FOR LACK OF OBJECTIVITY
                                                                                                     
A Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) session on  Wednesday will discuss a report to Chechnya following the latest visit  to the region by a PACE delegation led by Lord Judd.  

The chairman of the State Duma's international affairs committee and  head of the Russian delegation to the PACE winter session, Dmitri  Rogozin, has already said that out of the amendments to the document  proposed by Russia, only one insignificant change was made during a  session of the political commission on Tuesday.

Accordingly, PACE will vote on Lord Judd's proposal to postpone the referendum in Chechnya.

Rogozin fiercely criticised this position. In particular, he said that if the Russian amendments were not adopted, then the Parliamentary  Assembly would be betraying all the work on the constitutional process  that it had actively supported. According to him, this is a vital  issue for the political settlement in Chechnya, the formation of a  legitimate basis for future elections and the gradual hand-over of  power from the emergency administration to civil administrations. Any  attempt to postpone the referendum was tantamount to disrupting the  political process, the Russian parliamentarian said.

Rogozin also announced at the political commission session that if  Lord Judd's text were to be upheld without any account for the Russian  amendment to postpone the referedum, then the vote in Chechnya would  go ahead nonetheless, as Russia was not obliged to heed the opinion of  the Council of Europe on the matter of a referendum in a federation  subject.

Moreover, the head of the Russian delegation said that Judd, as the  purveyor of the report, "would lose his legitimacy in the eyes of  Russian public opinion and in the eyes of the Russian official  delegation to PACE." If Judd's recommendations are adopted during the vote on Chechnya, then the Russian PACE delegation will stop  co-operating with Lord Judd in his capacity as a report deliverer and  will request someone else to take his place. If this does not happen,  then the delegation will bar Judd from visiting Chechnya, as his trips  have provided nothing apart from defamation about what is really  happening there, Rogozin stressed.