#23 - JRL 2006-58 - JRL Home
Date: Tue, 07 Mar 2006
Subject: End the Silence Over Chechnya
From: glucksmann <glu@noos.fr>
End the Silence Over Chechnya
By André Glucksmann, Václav Havel, Prince Hassan bin Talal, Frederik Willem de
Klerk, Mary Robinson, Yohei Sasakawa, Karel Schwarzenberg, George Soros, and
Desmond Tutu
It is extremely difficult for an honest observer to break through the closed
doors that separate Chechnya from the rest of the world. Indeed, no one even
knows how many civilian casualties have there been in ten years of war.
According to estimates by non-governmental organizations, the figure is
between 100,000 (that is, one civilian out of ten) and 300,000 (one out of
four). How many voters participated in the November 2005 elections? Between 60
and 80%, according to Russian authorities; around 20%, reckon independent
observers. The blackout imposed on Chechnya prevents any precise assessment of
the devastating effects of a ruthless conflict.
But censorship cannot completely hide the horror. Under the world’s very
eyes, a capital – Grozny, with 400,000 inhabitants – has been razed for the
first time since Hitler’s 1944 punishment of Warsaw. Such inhumanity cannot
plausibly be described as “anti-terrorism,” as Russian President Vladimir Putin
insists. The Russian military leadership claims to be fighting against a party
of 700 to 2,000 combatants. What would be said if the British government had
bombed Belfast, or if the Spanish government bombed Bilbao, on the pretext of
quelling the IRA or the ETA?
And yet the world remains silent in the face of the looting of Grozny and
other Chechen towns and villages. Are Chechen women, children and all Chechen
civilians less entitled to respect than the rest of mankind? Are they still
considered human? Nothing can excuse the seeming indifference displayed by our
worldwide silence.
In Chechnya, our basic morality is at stake. Must the world accept the rape
of girls who were kidnapped by the occupying forces or their militias? Should we
tolerate the murder of children and the abduction of boys to be tortured,
broken, and sold back to their families, alive or dead? What about “filtration”
camps, or “human firewood”? What about the villages exterminated to set an
example? A few NGO’s and some brave Russian and Western reporters have witnessed
countless crimes. So we cannot say “we did not know.”
Indeed, the fundamental principle of democracies and civilized states is at
issue in Chechnya: civilians’ right to life, including the protection of
innocents, widows, and orphans. International agreements and the United Nations
Charter are as binding in Chechnya as anywhere else. The right of nations to
self-determination does not imply the right of rulers to dispose of their
people.
The fight against terrorism is also at stake. Who has not yet realized that
the Russian army is actually behaving like a group of pyromaniac firefighters,
fanning the fires of terrorism through its behavior? After ten years of a
large-scale repression, the fire, far from going out, is spreading, crossing
borders, setting Northern Caucasus ablaze and making combatants even more
fierce.
How much longer can we ignore the fact that, in raising the bogeyman of
“Chechen terrorism,” the Russian government is suppressing the liberties gained
when the Soviet empire collapsed? The Chechen war both masks and motivates the
reestablishment of a central power in Russia – bringing the media back under
state control, passing laws against NGO’s, and reinforcing the “vertical line of
power” – leaving no institutions and authorities able to challenge or limit the
Kremlin. War, it seems, is hiding a return to autocracy.
Sadly, wars in Chechnya have been going on for 300 years. They were savage
colonial conflicts under the Czar and almost genocidal under Stalin, who
deported the whole Chechen population, a third of which perished during their
transfer to the Gulag.
Because we reject colonial and exterminating ventures, because we love
Russian culture and believe that Russia can bloom in a democratic future, and
because we believe that terrorism – whether by stateless groups or state armies
�– should be condemned, we demand that the world’s blackout on the Chechen issue
must end. We must help Russia’s authorities escape from the trap they set for
themselves and into which they fell, putting not only Chechens and Russians, but
the world at risk.
It would be tragic if, during the G8 summit scheduled for St. Petersburg,
Russia, in June 2006, the Chechen issue were pushed to the side. This dreadful
and endless war needs to be discussed openly if it is to end peacefully.
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