U.K.: "Inconsistent"
Blair urged to speak out on Chechnya
(London, June 20, 2003) British Prime Minister Tony Blair must send a strong
message to Russian President Vladimir Putin on the worsening situation in Chechnya,
Human Rights Watch said today.
The Russian president is to arrive in London June 24 for a three-day state visit.
In an open letter to the British prime minister, Human Rights Watch called for
Blair to press for an end to abuses and to ensure accountability for those implicated
in rights violations.
Recent Human Rights Watch research and Russian government statistics show that
the situation in Chechnya is steadily worsening, with some 60 people being "disappeared"
every month. Russian officials have also recently admitted the existence of
forty-nine mass graves, containing the remains of almost 3,000 people.
In its letter, Human Rights Watch notes the strong position taken by the United
Kingdom at the recent United Nations Commission on Human Rights in Geneva, in
support of a resolution on Chechnya. That resolution, if passed, would have
pressed for accountability and demanded access for U.N. monitors, including
the U.N. rapporteurs on torture and extrajudicial killings. But the letter also
notes the apparent contradictions in Blair"s own stance.
In St. Petersburg this month, Blair spoke favourably of a recent referendum
on the future of Chechnya, despite the atrocious
circumstances widespread arbitrary detention, daily disappearances, and an
overall atmosphere of impunity in which the referendum was held and in which
ordinary Chechens continue to live.
Conflicting messages on Chechnya expose the prime minister to charges of inconsistency
and hypocrisy, said Steve Crawshaw, London director of Human Rights Watch. It
is absurd for the British government to criticise Russian behaviour in Chechnya
in one forum, and then for Blair to praise Putin when the two men meet face
to face.
In a parliamentary debate on Chechnya on June 18, Europe minister Denis MacShane
appeared evasive when pressed as to whether the prime minister would even raise
the issue of Chechnya in his meetings with the Russian president.
Blair later told the House of Commons that he would mention Chechnya in his
talks. In the same sentence, however, he emphasised: It's also important that
we support Russia in her action against terrorism. Human Rights Watch has repeatedly
condemned unlawful acts by Chechen rebels, including the Moscow theatre siege
last year and a number of attacks on the pro- Moscow civilian administration
in Chechnya. But Human Rights Watch argued that the British government fails
to make an important connection that the lack of accountability for the widespread
abuses in Chechnya does nothing to make Russia a safer place.
Blair played such a key role in making the Northern Ireland peace agreement
happen, he of all people should not fail to understand this basic point, said
Crawshaw. Repression and lack of accountability do not help stability, but rather
make things worse. Blair must make that point clearly when he meets Putin. Failure
to do so sends a message as well.
To read the open letter, please see:
http://hrw.org/press/2003/06/russia061903-ltr.htm
To read more on human rights issues in Russia and Chechnya, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/europe/russia.php
http://www.hrw.org/press/2003/06/russia062003.htm