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Radical MEP
Olivier Dupuis on hunger strike
Rome, 24 January
2004. On Sunday 18 January the Radical MEP Olivier Dupuis began a hunger
strike to urge the governments of the democratic countries, beginning
with the countries of the European Union, to tackle the issue of the
Chechen genocide with determination, both from a political and a humanitarian
point of view.
Statement by Olivier
Dupuis:
"I have begun this
hunger strike above all to express my solidarity towards the hundreds
of thousands of Chechens abandoned to a tragic fate, the victims since
1994 of a full-fledged genocide hidden by the European ruling classes
from the world of politics, finance, and the mass media; to express
my solidarity towards them a few weeks before the 60th anniversary of
the penultimate genocide of the Chechen people, on 23 February 1944,
when Stalin ordered the deportation to Central Asia of the whole Chechen
people, during which almost half the population died of starvation,
cold and disease.
My hunger strike
is an instrument of struggle, of action, and of political dialogue.
The things I am 'calling for' correspond to a series of political and
institutional duties, or in some cases even juridical obligations, which
no-one in Europe seems to want to fulfil, thus making it even more difficult
- for the few people still concerned - to avert the final completion
of the Chechen genocide and making it even easier, for the Russian occupying
forces, to finish off the extermination ordered by the Russian Administration.
In particular,
I call on the Council, the Commission and the Parliament, and the governments
and parliaments of the Member and Candidate States of the European Union:
To acknowledge
publicly that the Akhmadov Peace Plan in favour of the establishment
of an interim United Nations administration in Chechnya constitutes
the official proposal of the government of President Maskadov;
To recognise officially the genocide suffered by the Chechen people
in 1944, when Stalin ordered their deportation;
To draw up, in accordance with article 14 section 3 of the EC treaty,
a 'white list' of Chechen figures charged with promoting the search
for a peaceful and political solution to the Russo-Chechen tragedy,
allowing these persons to reside and travel freely in the territory
of the Union;
To guarantee security and dignified living conditions for the hundreds
of thousands of Chechens who are living, often in inhuman conditions,
in refugee camps inside and outside the borders of Russian territory,
not even enjoying the protection of refugee status;
To call on the Russian authorities to allow international organisations,
NGOs, and journalists back to work and circulate freely in Chechnya;
To support by every means possible the local and regional authorities
who have expressed their willingness to accommodate and treat Chechen
children wounded or mutilated by land-mines or bomb raids, in particular
by offering the full collaboration of the diplomatic services, in
order to remove all bureaucratic or material obstacles to entry into
the territory of the Union;
To welcome the thousands of Chechen students who are unable due to
the war to study in their own country into universities and secondary
schools in the Member States of the Union, also helping in this way
to form the Chechen ruling class of the future.
I invite the representatives
of the local administrations and the European Regions:
To set up and
multiply initiatives of solidarity towards the Chechen people, supporting
the Peace Plan for the establishment of an interim United Nations
administration in Chechnya and welcoming Chechen students into their
universities and wounded or mutilated children into their hospitals.
I also invite citizens:
To mobilise to
increase the total of over 14,000 citizens, elected politicians and
leading figures from more than 90 countries who have already signed
the appeal in support of the Peace Plan for a UN administration in
Chechnya;
To mobilise to organise demonstrations on 23 February outside the
seats of government, wherever possible, to commemorate the victims
of the deportation of 1944, and the Chechen genocides of the past
and the present".
The appeal in support
of the Peace Plan can be signed on-line at www.radicalparty.org
=====
Don't forget Chechnya!
You can support the Chechen Minister of Foreign Affairs Peace Plan for
the establishment of an interim United Nations administration in Chechnya
by signing the appeal on the TRP site: www.radicalparty.org
=====
Olivier Dupuis Member
of the European Parliament http://www.radicalparty.org/
tel. +32 2 284 7198
fax +32 2 284 9198
Russia and Council of Europe improve collaboration in Chechnya
RosBusinessConsulting.
Monday, Jan. 26, 2004
Cooperation between
Russia and the Council of Europe stepped up from merely monitoring the
observance of human rights to implementing real programs for restoring
peaceful life in Chechnya and rendering assistance in establishing new
authorities and civil society in the republic, according to Foreign
Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko. The spokesman specified that
from June 2000 to April 2003 cooperation between Russia and the Council
of Europe regarding Chechnya had been based on the permanent presence
of the council's experts at the office of the Russian presidential envoy
for ensuring human rights and freedoms in Chechnya. Activities of the
experts were almost entirely confined to monitoring related problems
in the region and registering complaints from the public in the event
their human rights were violated. In late 2003, Russia and the Council
of Europe came to an agreement on principle guidelines of collaboration
seeking to improve the situation in the breakaway republic. From now
on, the council's experts will not stay in Chechnya on a permanent basis,
and will be called by the Russian side for performing specific missions
under a corresponding program for 2004.
-------------------------
Comment: "The council's experts will be called by the Russian side for
performing specific missions"?!?!? So they definitely decided to become
the puppets of the Kremlin propaganda?? Everything seems to indicate
that this is the usual farce of CoE. M.M.
-------------------------
Jan 25, 2003
IHF: Rights
Activist Killed
MOSCOW (AP) --
The mutilated body of a human rights activist recently kidnapped in
Chechnya has been found near the eastern city of Gudermes, the Vienna-based
International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights said Friday.
The activist, Aslan
Davletukaev, worked for the Society of Russian- Chechen Friendship,
collecting information for human rights situation in Chechnya. His group
said his murder could be the result of his work.
It said Davletukaev
was kidnapped on Jan. 10 from his home in the southern village of Avtury
by about 50 Russian soldiers who arrived in three armored personnel
carriers
eng.kavkaz.memo.ru
26/1/2004
Volunteer of
Society for Russian-Chechen Friendship killed
On January 16,
Russian servicemen found the dead body of Aslan Davletukayev near a
road that enters the town of Gudermes. Aslan was a volunteer of the
information center of the Society for Russian-Chechen Friendship. His
body had traces of violent death and torture. Aslan's arm and leg were
broken, joints were injured by a thin thrust object, similar to an awl.
His death resulted from a bullet wound in the head.
Aslan Davletukayev
was illegally detained by officers of security agencies on January 10
in the village of Avtury, Chechnya's Shali district. He was at home
with his friend when it happened. Some 50 "security agents" came into
three armored troop-carriers and two armored UAZ cars. A witness says
some of the abductors were in masks. They spoke Russian. Threatening
Aslan with arms, they took him away. Aslan's relatives and friends as
well as activists of the Society searched for him after the abduction.
Since 2000, Aslan
Davletukayev has regularly collected information about the human rights
situation in the Chechen Republic for the information center of the
Society for Russian-Chechen Friendship. The Society does not rule out
that the motive for the abduction and further murder of Davletukayev
might have been in his public activity.
Source: Society
for Russian-Chechen Friendship
The chairperson of the regional department of the SRCF apprehends
his abduction
Today, on January
26, 2004 at 0.30 am the chairperson of the Chechen and Ingush branch
of the Society for the Russian-Chechen Friendship Imran Ezhiev was
through to his colleagues from the editorial office of the Information
Center at the SRCF. He returned from the Chechen Republic the day
before. He was investigating the abduction and the murder of the SRCF
volunteer Aslan Davletukaev. Imran told that a gray 10-model "Zhiguli"
car without any number plate had been following him since his return
to Ingushetia and so he apprehended either his abduction or any other
unlawful acts against him. The fact that the road police doesn't stop
the car without any number plate proves the assumption that it might
belong to the security service of the pro-Moscow president of Chechnya
Akhmad Kadyrov.
Imran Ezhiev
has been subject to numerous arbitrary detentions and unlawful arrests
by representatives of federal forces since the time when the Society
for the Russian-Chechen Friendship was established in 2000. He was
detained on March 15, 2003 for the last time when he was going from
Shali district center to Serzhen-Yurt village of the Chechen Republic.
He was abducted by armed representatives of an unidentified force
structure in masks. He was released on March 18, 2003 as a result
of a number of appeals made by different international organizations.
The abductors interrogated him on issues connected with his public
activities and the work of the Society for the Russian-Chechen Friendship.
[26.01.2004
21:25] The Society for the Russian-Chechen Friendship
26.1.2004
Man arrested
in Chechnya dies from torture
24-year-old Shirvani
Eskerkhanov who lived in the village of Ghekhi onUrus-Martan district
in Chechnya, was arrested by Russian servicemen inthe town of Khasaviurt
in Daghestan on 14 December 2003. Until recently,nothing was known
about his fate.
According to the
press service of Chechen Committee for NationalSalvation, a week after
Mr. Eskerkhanov had been arrested, his relativesreceived information
that he was kept in 9th City Hospital. Next day therelatives arrived
to the hospital only to find that he wasn’t there.
Hospital doctors
told the man’s family that while in serious condition,he had
been taken to District Department for Fight against OrganisedCrime.
They failed to find Mr. Eskerkhanov in the named institution, andits
officials said that he had been taken to district militia departmentin
the town of Gheorghievsk in Stavropol region. Shirvani Eskerkhanovdied
in Gheorghievsk unable to bear the torture.
Mr. Eskerkhanov’s
family were at first refused their request to takeaway the man’s
body; it wasn’t until 28 December 2003 that they wereable to
bring his body home and bury him at the village cemetery.
After receiving
Mr. Eskerkhanov’s body, they found that the man’s headwas
scalped by the Russian military and a small toe on the his foot hadbeen
cut off. There were also stabbed wounds and other signs of tortureon
the body.
PRIMA News Agency
[2004-01-22-Chech-06]
Russian servicemen
"have taken to the highway": they tried to rob people of money and
their jewelry at a checkpoint
On January 22,
2004 at 7 pm Russian servicemen committed an armed assault at civil
people to rob them at the "Caucasus-1" checkpoint situated at the
birder between the Chechen Republic and the Republic of Ingushetia
on the federal motorway Rostov - Baku. The crime was stopped by servicemen
of the pro-Moscow Chechen police. "Zhiguli VAZ-21063" car was stopped
for the usual examination and documents check-up. There were two men
and a woman in the car. They were going from the Chechen village of
Shaami-Yurt to the Ingush town of Karabulak. The servicemen found
nothing illegal but they ordered the people to get out of the car
and opened fire over their heads. Then one of the servicemen told
their victims to get all the money out of their pockets and to take
their gold jewellery off. He said to them, "We'll think what to do
with you after it!"
The people were
saved by Chechen policemen who were going through the checkpoint at
that time. Zargan Alieva, a passenger of the "Zhiguli" car told the
correspondent of the Information Center at the Society for the Russian-Chechen
Friendship, "I'm sure that if those two militiamen hadn't driven up
to us, we would have been either killed or taken somewhere away. We
could have been robbed of all our valuables. We could have disappeared
without any traces left"! . The Chechen militiamen didn't attempt
to detain the criminals as "they had been performing their duties".
It was reasonable of them as the "Caucasus-1" checkpoint is a well-fortified
area where there are a lot of Russian servicemen. Any conflict with
them could turn out fatal for the Chechen militiamen. People run much
risk going through "Caucasus-1" checkpoint when it gets dark.
[26.01.2004
21:25] The Society for the Russian-Chechen Friendship
EKho Moskvy. 26 January 2004 [BBC Monitoring]
Abolition of
Chechnya human rights post was premature - Pamfilova
The post of presidential
humans right envoy for Chechnya should not have been abolished before
the parliamentary election in the republic, Ella Pamfilova, chair of
the Presidential Commission on Human Rights, told Ekho Moskvy radio,
as reported by the radio's news agency.
"An armed conflict
is still going on there, Chechnya remains a dangerous area and there
are many problems with human rights," Pamfilova said. "Of course, the
leader of the republic [Akhmat Kadyrov] must guarantee human rights
observance, but public control [over this issue] is most essential,"
she said. Now that the post of human rights envoy for Chechnya has been
abolished, Chechen citizens who failed to find protection from local
authorities may apply to the Russian ombudsman [Oleg Mironov], Pamfilova
said.
"Our commission
will also take on part of this work," she said. Chechens complain to
her commission about corrupt officials who take bribes for timely payment
of compensation for lost housing and property, Pamfilova added.
"We'll have to
check these reports," she said. Pamfilova said that her commission would
act to stop any attempts to force Chechen refugees in Ingushetia to
return to Chechnya. Some 4,000- 5,000 people are currently in Ingushetia.
Some of them won't ever return, and a part of the budget for accommodation
of refugees in Chechnya should be redirected to Ingushetia, she said.
Jan. 26, 2003
UN Offered Assurances
on Refugees
The Associated
Press VLADIKAVKAZ, North Ossetia -- Stanislav Ilyasov, the Cabinet minister
in charge of Chechnya, told a senior UN official Monday that the government
would not force refugees from Chechnya to return home.
Ilyasov told UN
Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Jan Egeland that 49,000
Chechen refugees are currently living in Ingushetia, about 5,000 of
them in tent camps. "No one will be forced to move to Chechnya," Ilyasov
said, adding that about half of the Chechen refugees now staying in
Ingushetia are expected to remain there.
At the same time,
Ilyasov said that the government would encourage residents of the tent
camps to return to Chechnya. He said those who agree to resettle will
receive security guarantees and housing and be eligible for a government
compensation for the housing and property. The compensation amounts
to a total of 350,000 rubles ($12,300) per family.
Kadyrov's terror against Chechen family
The Mutayev family
from the city of Gudermes, living on Dagestan Street,are experiencing
real terror from Kadyrov’s gang formations. With nogrounds whatsoever
Kadyrov’s puppet officials accused Ismail Mutayev,one of the sons
of Hava Mutayeva, of kidnapping someone named Abu Movlayev.
After starting a
real hunt for Ismail, the collaborators have beencommitting all kinds
of atrocities against the Mutayev family to thisday. They shot Ismail’s
brother Aslan Mutayev on May 9, 2001. In May2002 armed collaborators
broke into the Mutayevs’ house and took awayIsmail’s older
brother Vakha Mutayev.
They also took away
Vakha’s friend Zelimkhan right from his own home.Kadyrov’s
collaborators shot Zelimkhan’s wife when they were takingZelimkhan
away. Nothing has been known about Vakha or Zelimkhan eversince. The
appeals that their relatives have made to the invaders’ powerstructures
to find out about the fate of Vakha and Zelimkhan yielded noresults.
After all of that,
the collaborators started terrorizing Ismail’s motherHava. On
December 25, 2003, they took Hava Mutayeva hostage to have herexchanged
for her son Ismail. They released the elderly woman afterholding her
in a cold basement with no food for two days, - CCNR PressService reported.
Kavkaz-Center News
2004-01-21
Invaders tried to kill Chechen taxi driver
An incident that
happened in Achkhoi-Martan District of the ChechenRepublic on January
16, 2004, is a graphic example of the morale ofRussian soldiers. Three
Russian invaders from the base stationed in thevillage of Bamut hitchhiked
and came to district capital Achkhoi-Martanto do some shopping at the
market. After they were done with theshopping they took a taxi to come
back to their base, - Press Service ofChechen Committee for National
Rescue (CCNR) reported.
On the way back
to the base two of the three invaders offered theircompanion to kill
the cab driver. They started arguing since he wasrefusing to be a part
of the crime. The driver got scared of beingkilled and jumped out of
the car while the car was moving. The invaderstook the car and went
to the village of Arshty.
In Arshty the car
with three aggressors on board was detained by thelocals of that village.
The locals were surprised that some unknown menwere in the car belonging
to their fellow villager. It was the reasonwhy the car was detained.
The locals handed the three invaders over tothe local pro-Moscow puppet
police. At the police station the invadersrefused to testify and demanded
that the commander of their base wascalled in. But then they confessed
to the crime that they committed.The commander of their military base
arrived, demanded that hissubordinates are released and threatened to
sent his units and use forceagainst the police station. It was also
reported that the puppet policeturned down his demand. The situation
around the three criminals isstill unsolved and the tension is remaining.
Kavkaz-Center News
2004-01-21
Human Rights Watch - January 2004.
Glad to be Deceived”:
the International Community and Chechnya
By
Rachel Denber
“It is
so easy to deceive me, for I am glad to be deceived.”
- Alexander Pushkin,
“Confession” (1826)
The armed conflict
in Chechnya, now in its fourth year, is the most serious human rights
crisis of the new decade in Europe. It has taken a disastrous toll on
the civilian population and is now one of the greatest threats to stability
and rule of law in Russia. Yet the international community’s response
to it has been shameful and shortsighted.
The international
community has a moral and political obligation to protect fundamental
rights of people in and around Chechnya. It should with a unified voice
be prevailing on the Russian government to halt forced disappearances,
torture, and arbitrary detention, which Russian forces perpetrate on
a daily basis. It should be compiling documentation about abuses into
an authoritative, official record. It should be vigorously pressing
for a credible accountability process for perpetrators of serious violations
of international humanitarian law, and should think strategically about
how to achieve this when the Russian court system fails to deliver justice.
And it should stop Russia from forcing the return of displaced people
to areas where their safety and well-being cannot be ensured.
But none of this
has happened. The international community has instead chosen the path
of self-deception, choosing to believe Russia’s claims that the
situation in Chechnya is stabilizing, and so be spared of making tough
decisions about what actions are necessary to stop flagrant abuses and
secure the well-being of the people of the region.
The year 2003 saw
no improvement in the international community’s disappointing
response to the Chechen situation. All the international community could
muster were well-intended statements of concern that were never reinforced
with political, diplomatic, financial or other consequences.
Chechnya was placed
on the agenda of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights, the highest human
rights body within the U.N. system, but even there a resolution on Chechnya
failed to pass. No government leader was willing to press for specific
improvements during summits with Russian President Vladimir V. Putin.
In late 2002 the Russian government closed the field office in Chechnya
of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). And
to date the Russian government had still not invited U.N. special rapporteurs
on torture and extrajudicial executions to visit the region. And unlike
in other armed conflicts in Europe, few foreign missions in Russia sought
to gather first-hand information about continuing human rights abuses.
It did not have
to be this way. Events of the past decade have shown that however flawed
their policies might be in many respects, concerned states and intergovernmental
bodies can play a significant role in addressing human rights violations.
Even in the Balkans, where the international community failed to stop
horrific abuses as they were occurring, concerned states eventually
supported the creation of the International Criminal Tribunal on the
former Yugoslavia, a significant and likely long-lasting contribution
to security and human rights in the region. Hundreds of OSCE monitors
deployed to Kosovo in November 1998 were able to create official documentation
of massacres and other human rights abuses.
To be sure, there
are important political obstacles to affecting Russia’s behavior
in Chechnya. Because it is a permanent member of the United Nations
Security Council, Russia was able to shield Chechnya from serious U.N.
scrutiny, save for the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in 2000 and 2001.
The U.S. and European governments have broad political and economic
agendas with Russia, ranging from strategic missile defense to energy
security to Russian policy in the Middle East. But none of these factors
can justify or fully explain the international community’s reluctance
to promote human rights protections in and around Chechnya, or why Russia
never has had to face significant consequences for abuses by its troops.
International disengagement
on Chechnya became more marked after the September 11, 2001 attacks
in the United States. Russia, which had since 1999 called the conflict
in Chechnya a “counter-terror operation,” soon began to
argue that the war in Chechnya was its contribution to the U.S.-led
global campaign against terrorism. Russia succeeded in further shielding
the conflict from scrutiny in international forums and in Russia itself.
Western governments
have emphasized the need for Russia to find a political solution to
the conflict. But they fail to see the role that continuing abuses play
in prolonging it. For this reason, the policy of disengagement is shortsighted.
As abuses continue, and as there continues to be no credible accountability
process, Chechens appear to be losing what faith or hope they may have
had in the Russian government. Disengagement, particularly now, is untimely.
Russia has spared little effort to present the situation as stabilizing.
But it has proven incapable of ending the conflict; instead, in 2003
it began to spill into neighboring Ingushetia, with Russian forces perpetrating
the same abuses there as they have in Chechnya.
In the long term,
disengagement on Chechnya is a disservice to human rights in Russia.
Having faced no diplomatic or other consequences for its crimes in Chechnya,
the Russian government has certainly learned an important lesson about
the limits of the international community’s political will in
pursuing human rights.
Unchecked patterns
of abuse by Russia’s forces in Chechnya will eventually affect
the rest of Russian society. Tens of thousands of police and security
forces have done tours of duty in Chechnya, after which they return
to their home regions, bringing with them learned patterns of brutality
and impunity. Several Russian human rights groups have begun to note
a “Chechen syndrome” among police who served in Chechnya—a
particular pattern of physical abuse and other dehumanizing treatment
of people in custody. Russians already face serious risk of torture
in police custody. The Chechnya experience is thus undermining efforts
to promote the rule of law in Russia’s criminal justice system.
Human Rights Abuses
in the Chechnya Conflict
Russia’s second
armed conflict in Chechnya in the 1990s began in September 1999. Russia
claimed it was a counter-terror operation, aimed at eliminating the
chaos that had reined in Chechnya since the end of the 1994-1996 Chechen
war and at liquidating terrorist groups that had found haven there.
Five months of indiscriminate bombing and shelling in 1999 and early
2000 resulted in thousands of civilian deaths. Three massacres, which
followed combat operations, took the lives of at least 130 people. By
March 2000, Russia’s federal forces gained at least nominal control
over most of Chechnya. They began a pattern of classic “dirty
war” tactics and human rights abuses that continue to mark the
conflict to this day. Russian forces arbitrarily detain those allegedly
suspected of being, or collaborating with, rebel fighters and torture
them in custody to secure confessions or testimony. In some cases, the
corpses of those last seen in Russian custody were subsequently found,
bearing marks of torture and summary execution, in dumping grounds or
unmarked graves. More often, those last seen in custody are simply never
seen again—they have been forcibly disappeared. Make no mistake,
Chechen rebel forces too have committed grave crimes, including numerous
brutal attacks targeting civilians in and outside of Chechnya, killing
and injuring many. Rebel fighters were also responsible for assassinations
of civil servants cooperating with the pro-Moscow Chechen administration
of Chechnya. Anti-personnel land mines laid by fighters and Russian
forces claimed the lives of federal soldiers and civilians alike.
At the height of
the Chechen war in 2000, as many as 300,000 people had been displaced
from their homes, with most living in the neighboring republic of Ingushetia.
Of these, 40,000 resided in tent camps.
By 2003, the cycle
of arbitrary detention, torture, and forced disappearance was well entrenched,
and the crisis of forced disappearances appeared to have become a permanent
one. According to unpublished governmental statistics, 126 people were
abducted and presumed “disappeared” in January and February
2003 alone. In mid-August, the Chechen Ministry of Internal Affairs
said that nearly 400 people had “disappeared” in Chechnya
since the beginning of the year. Local officials in 2003 have also admitted
the existence of forty-nine mass graves containing the remains of nearly
3,000 civilians.
As noted above,
the conflict increasingly has spilled over the Chechen border into Ingushetia,
still a haven for tens of thousands of displaced Chechens, and Russian
operations there have been as abusive as they are in Chechnya. In June
2003, Russian and pro-Moscow Chechen forces conducted at least seven
security operations in Ingushetia, five of them in settlements for Chechen
displaced persons. The operations involved numerous cases of arbitrary
arrest and detention, ill-treatment, and looting. As with abuses committed
in Chechnya, authorities failed to diligently investigate the violations
and hold perpetrators accountable.
Russian authorities
in Ingushetia also have kept up steady pressure on displaced people
living in tent camps to return to Chechnya. Throughout 2003, as in 2002,
federal and local migration authorities intermittently cut off gas,
electricity, water, and other infrastructure services to several of
the camps and removed hundreds of people from camp registration lists,
causing them to be evicted. In addition, officials threatened the displaced
people with arrests on false charges such as drugs and weapons possession,
and impending security sweeps. Migration authorities closed one camp
in the middle of winter in 2002, another in October 2003, and as of
this writing seemed set to close yet a third; meanwhile, authorities
blocked the construction of alternative shelters in Ingushetia.
Closing the tent
camps, which at this writing housed more than 12,000 displaced Chechens,
and pressuring people to return to Chechnya is part of a larger government
strategy to put the Chechnya “problem” back inside Chechnya
so that authorities can claim that the situation there is “normalizing.”
Such claims, in turn, are used to support Russia’s position that
international scrutiny of the republic is no longer justifiable.
The International
Response
The international
community was poorly positioned to respond effectively to these developments
because it had acquiesced in Russia’s efforts to keep outside
observers from being deployed to Chechnya. In late 2002 the Russian
government refused to renew the mandate of the OSCE Assistance Group,
effectively closing the organization’s important field presence
in Chechnya. Since mid-2001, the Assistance Group had reported on human
rights conditions, facilitated humanitarian relief, and promoted a peaceful
resolution of the crisis in Chechnya. Negotiations over renewing the
OSCE mandate collapsed after Russia insisted that the mission relinquish
its human rights and political dimensions. To its credit, the OSCE refused.
After the closure, the Dutch chairmanship pressed for a new OSCE presence
with a human rights component, but did not receive support from other
OSCE participating states necessary to make the effort successful.
As already noted,
a resolution sponsored by the European Union on Chechnya failed to pass
at the 2003 session of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights for the second
year in a row. It was rejected in part because the European Union seemed
to will it to fail: as in 2002, it used the threat of a resolution only
as a bargaining chip to coax the Russian government into agreeing to
a much weaker chairman’s statement. This strategy was misguided
in its optimism, given that the Russian government had ever since the
beginning of the conflict vehemently rejected international criticism
of its conduct of the war and mobilized diplomatic resources to keep
the Chechnya issue out of the U.N. When Russia predictably walked away
from the chairman’s statement negotiations, the E.U. introduced
the resolution but then purposively failed to advocate for its adoption,
and refused to share information about its strategy with third party
states.
In January 2003,
the Chechnya rapporteur for the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe (PACE) Lord Judd put forward a resolution calling on Russia
to postpone a constitutional referendum for Chechnya planned for March,
citing the escalating conflict and persistence of human rights abuses
and a poor security environment. After a hot debate, PACE rejected this
proposal, and instead called on Russia to ensure appropriate conditions
for the referendum. Lord Judd resigned in protest. In April, PACE adopted
a highly critical resolution on the human rights situation and the lack
of accountability in Chechnya.
UNHCR worked hard
to ensure protection for displaced persons in Ingushetia in 2002-03,
and protested Russian government efforts to force them back. As authorities
moved to close camps, UNHCR was able to prevent eighty families from
being left homeless in Ingushetia. UNHCR’s efforts are admirable.
But Russia’s intent to close tent camps could not be clearer,
and UNHCR’s efforts will not be sufficient unless U.N. member
states also seek and obtain political commitments from Russia that ensure
protection for displaced persons.
At the bilateral
level, little apparent effort was made at the highest levels to press
Russia to improve human rights protections in the region. President
Putin received a ringing endorsement from governments around the world
who helped him celebrate the 300th anniversary of the founding
of St. Petersburg. Chechnya was at the bottom of the agendas in summits
with British Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George W.
Bush. Speaking on behalf of the Italian presidency of the European Union,
Silvio Berlusconi even went so far as to praise the Chechen presidential
elections, which nearly every independent observer said were rigged.
Antecedents to
Inaction
Many analysts attribute
international diffidence with respect to abuses in Chechnya to changing
international priorities after September 11, 2001, particularly the
increasing focus on global security. But in fact the antecedents to
inaction go much farther back, even to the early months of the war.
The international community deserves credit for the strong and forthright
criticism it mounted at that time, and for efforts to bring diplomatic
pressure to bear to convince the government to rein in abusive troops
and allow access to the region. But the effort for the most part was
half-hearted and short-lived, ending soon after Vladimir Putin, who
became acting president upon Boris Yeltsin’s resignation on December
31, 1999, was elected president in March 2000.
In the early months
of the war, Russian forces razed Grozny in indiscriminate bombing, killing
thousands, arrested thousands more, and summarily executed more than
130 detained persons in post-battle sweep operations. International
criticism was sharp. The OSCE in 1999 insisted on a reaffirmation of
its mandate in Chechnya, and in April 2000, the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe suspended Russia’s voting rights, restoring
them only in January 2001. In late 1999, the EU adopted a decision to
freeze certain technical assistance programs because of Chechnya and
recommended that embassy personnel travel to the region and gather information
on events there. But after Yeltsin’s resignation the EU toned
down its rhetoric; the recommendation to send in diplomats was never
implemented.
The limits the international
community set for itself in this early period would set the parameters
for years to come. Only the PACE recognized massacres of noncombatants
as war crimes. International actors apparently were not prepared to
follow through on the consequences that recognizing the massacres as
war crimes would entail.
No government or
multilateral institution was willing to consider linking financial benefits
to improvements on the ground in Chechnya or the creation of a credible
accountability process. The World Bank, which arguably had the most
leverage and a mandate to withhold aid on human rights grounds, released
U.S. $450 million in structural adjustment loan payments to Russia during
the first year of the war, which went directly to the Russian government
for unrestricted general budgetary spending.
Multilateral institutions
and their member states also resisted pressing for an accountability
process that had any international involvement, putting their faith
in the Russian government to establish a credible domestic monitoring
and accountability process. Council of Europe member states did not
act on PACE’s recommendation that they file an interstate complaint
against Russia with the European Court of Human Rights.
In 2000 and 2001
the U.N. Human Rights Commission adopted strong resolutions condemning
human rights abuses in Chechnya and calling on Russia to invite U.N.
thematic mechanisms to the region. But it stopped short of calling for
an international commission of inquiry, requiring instead that Russia
establish a national commission of inquiry. The Russian government bitterly
opposed the resolution, and vowed not to cooperate with its recommendations.
At the time, Human Rights Watch and others urged the Commission to call
for an international commission of inquiry, which could operate, albeit
in a limited capacity, in the face of Russian objections. We had serious
doubts that the Russian government would establish a thorough and impartial
monitoring or accountability process.
The Russian government
established a human rights office in Chechnya, headed by President Putin’s
special envoy on human rights in Chechnya. A national commission of
inquiry was formed, in name only. Neither institution had the authority
to investigate or prosecute violations of humanitarian law or human
rights law, and neither produced an official record of the abuses committed
by both sides of the conflict.
In April 2001, at
the request of PACE, the Russian government made available a list of
criminal investigations related to the Chechnya conflict. This list
revealed the extent of the impunity for crimes committed in the conflict:
the vast majority of criminal cases were not under active investigation;
no cases had made it to the courts; and there was no investigation into
widespread torture, one of the key abuses of the conflict.
The international
community had an important role to play in documenting abuses, both
to inform policy toward Russia and, ultimately, to produce an official
record of the abuses committed in the conflict. In 1999, the EU instructed
heads of embassies of its member states to visit the region to gather
information on humanitarian assistance. In sharp contrast to its efforts
in Kosovo prior to March 1999, the instruction was not implemented,
and working-level visits by diplomats to the region were few and far
between.
The OSCE’s
Assistance Group to Grozny was the best equipped institution to lead
a documentation effort on Chechnya. It had documented abuses in the
1994-1996 Chechnya conflict, played a crucial role in negotiating an
end to it, and was still on the ground as late as 1998. The OSCE subsequently
had gained institutional expertise in documenting humanitarian law violations
in Kosovo. Its book, As Seen as Told, remains to this day one
of the most authoritative accounts of the abuses that occurred in Kosovo
prior to March 1999. It could not apply this experience to Chechnya,
as Russia’s prodigious efforts at presenting obstacles caused
the Assistance Group to postpone its redeployment until May 2001. And
even after its redeployment, the Assistance Group was constrained in
its reporting.
In 2000, the Council
of Europe seconded experts for Putin’s special representative
for human rights in Chechnya, but they spent most of the year in Strasbourg.
After a bomb exploded near the experts’ passing car in Chechnya
in April 2003, they deemed the security situation too volatile to return.
Even prior to that date, the work of the experts in Chechnya had been
severely inhibited by their limited mandate, which prevented them from
freely moving around Chechnya and conducting investigations of key incidents
on their own initiative. The reporting of the experts generally contained
little information that could not be found in other sources and information
on human rights abuses was often of a general nature. The quality of
reporting had improved in late 2002, but since April 2003 the experts
have been forced to do their work in Strasbourg, which has made it impossible
for them to directly monitor the situation on the ground.
As prime minister,
Putin had staked his political career on the “counterterror”
operation in Chechnya. Under his presidency the government, and he personally,
greeted international criticism of the campaign, no matter how mild,
with outbursts, threats, and indignation. If the strategy aimed to dampen
Russia’s interlocutors’ enthusiasm for constructive intervention,
it was successful. By mid-2000, Western leaders understood that Putin,
until then a political unknown, had consolidated power and would lead
Russia for at least four more years. They generally ceased to press
Russia for concessions on Chechnya. This meant that the international
community’s most important multilateral achievements on Chechnya—resolutions
at the United Nations Human Rights Commission, resolutions by the PACE,
and the like—received no reinforcement at the bilateral level,
and so went unheeded.
Russia, Chechnya,
and the Global Campaign against Terror
By September 11,
2001, the war in Chechnya, its toll on civilians and its broader implications
for the rule of law in Russia had fallen off the agenda of many of Russia’s
interlocutors. After the attacks in the United States, as noted above,
Russia cast the conflict in Chechnya as its contribution to the global
campaign against terrorism, pointing to links certain Chechen field
commanders allegedly had to al-Qaeda.
Russia’s cooperation
was needed in the war in Afghanistan, and would later be sought in the
U.S. war in Iraq. Several heads of state indicated outright that Russia’s
conduct in Chechnya would be seen in a new light. The horrific hostage-taking
by Chechen rebels on a Moscow theater in October 2002 caused revulsion
in Russia and throughout the world, and lent credence to Putin’s
assertions and, in the minds of some, seemed to confirm the existence
of links between certain rebel groups and al-Qaeda. A series of suicide
bombings in Chechnya and other parts of Russia in 2002 and 2003 killed
and maimed hundreds more.
Already made a lower
priority, Chechnya practically disappeared from governments’ public
agendas with Russia. Neither the European Union, its member states,
nor the United States has had the political courage to mount strong
criticism at key moments, or call publicly for accountability or for
U.N. rapporteurs to be allowed to visit the region. Most governments
have called publicly and in a coordinated fashion for Russia to desist
from compelling displaced persons to return to Chechnya. But after so
many years of criticism unmatched by a credible threat of sanction,
such words yielded little effect.
In dealing with
Chechnya today, governments and multilateral institutions for the most
part stress the need for a political solution to the conflict, rather
than pressing for an immediate end to human rights abuses, let alone
holding Russia and Chechen rebels to account for them. Many argue that
the abuses will end only when the conflict ends. The international community
should not be reproached for seeking an end the conflict in Chechnya,
but emphasizing this goal over all others overlooks the fact that it
is the continuing cycle of abuses that fuel the conflict. To end the
conflict, the Russian government has to build in the population of Chechnya
an atmosphere of trust in Russia’s institutions. But the daily
grind of torture, arbitrary detention, and forced disappearances instead
sows further mistrust. As people see their loved ones killed or disappeared
they have less incentive not to join the rebel effort.
Russia’s efforts
at finding a political solution—at “normalizing” the
situation—are not ending the conflict in Chechnya, but rather
making the conflict less visible to the outside world. The constitutional
referendum held in Chechnya in March 2003, and the subsequent presidential
elections in October, were widely advertised by the Russian government
as a final stage of stabilization of conditions in the republic. In
reality, the referendum and elections took place against a background
of continuing and escalating violence, and independent observers unanimously
believed that the elections were rigged. Yet the Russian government
has continued to use both elections to convince the outside world that
the situation is normalizing through a political process, and to argue
that international scrutiny or other involvement is no longer justified.
Ironically, as the
Russian government is emphasizing the international implications of
the Chechnya operation for the global campaign against terrorism, it
is shutting the region to international scrutiny and cooperation. This
discredits Russia’s partners in the global campaign against terrorism
among those inside Chechnya who suffer form lawlessness and abuse at
the hands of Russia’s forces and Chechen rebels.
As Russian forces
enjoy impunity for crimes in Chechnya, and as Russia has escaped any
significant diplomatic consequences for such crimes, the Russian government
may come to expect nothing less than international disengagement on
human rights more generally in Russia. The Russian public may conclude
that it is acceptable for the government to be unaccountable for its
actions. This will stunt progress on human rights in Russia for years
to come, as the government learns to simply dismiss criticism of its
broader human rights record, confident that words, no matter how tough,
will never translate into action.
The Way Forward
Russia’s sway
within the international arena should not hinder a robust response from
the international community on human rights abuses in Chechnya. The
international community should consider that Russia’s involvement
in the war against terrorism raises rather than diminishes the stakes
of its conduct in Chechnya. Russia’s status as a permanent member
of the U.N. Security Council, and its ability to remove Chechnya from
the U.N.’s agenda, heightens the importance of regional mechanisms—the
Council of Europe and the OSCE. To be effective, these institutions
require first and foremost the support of their member governments in
their bilateral relations with Russia. At the same time, U.N. officials,
including the secretary-general, should press Russian authorities to
allow U.N. institutions and mechanisms to play a role in monitoring
and promoting human rights in Chechnya. This too is a message that must
be reinforced in bilateral relations.
Russia’s interlocutors
should coordinate to deliver a unified message on the need for accountability
for crimes against civilians, access to the region by human rights monitors,
continued international assistance to displaced persons, and an end
to involuntary returns to Chechnya. They should use summits and multilateral
meetings as opportunities to press for specific benchmarks—including
an updated, detailed list of investigations and prosecutions; invitations
to the U.N. special rapporteurs on torture, extrajudicial executions,
and violence against women; and binding commitments not to compel displaced
persons to return to Chechnya until it is safe to do so, to provide
decent and humane shelter to those who continue to be displaced, and
to allow for international agencies to continue to provide relief for
them. They should press for these benchmarks publicly and forcefully,
and make clear that political, diplomatic, and financial consequences
will follow should improvements not be forthcoming.
The international
community can also help the cause of justice by supporting local organizations
that help victims of abuse in Chechnya press their claims with the European
Court of Human Rights. Once there is momentum on justice, international
financial institutions should make clear that they will make the Russian
government’s compliance with court judgments a condition for future
loan and credit disbursements.
Wishing away the
human rights crisis in Chechnya will in the long run will not serve
the goal of a peaceful resolution to the armed conflict. It is also
a disservice to the thousands of people who have suffered human rights
abuses and who are left with nowhere to turn for justice. A robust international
response to Russia, one that backs words with action, is a critical
part of the solution.
Human Rights Watch
- January 2004.
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