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Crimean Tatars: suppression, intimidation, fear and distrust

Crimea
A country illegally uses military force to seize the territory of a neighbouring country despite having signed treaties recognising, and promising to respect, that country’s territorial integrity.  Once in de facto control, the new authorities systematically suppress and intimidate an important ethnic minority with strong links to Turkey. 
 
It’s happening right here in Europe.
 
I blogged in April 2014 about “Why Ukraine matters and what happens next”.  In that blog I noted UN concerns about human rights in Russia-controlled Crimea, including arbitrary arrest and torture, and about the Tartar community there.
 
So I was struck to read a report published on 5 June by an unofficial Turkish delegation which visited Crimea in April to collect information about allegations of  human rights violations against Crimean Tartars.  The report paints a chilling picture of systematic abuse and suppression of the Tartar minority in Crimea, which numbers around 250,000 people or around 10% of the Crimean population of 2.4m.
 
The report is available on the internet in English.  Rather than attempt to summarise it, I will include some exerts, as follows:
 

The report also includes at an appendix a list of the names of killed or “vanished” Crimean Tartars as established by the delegation during meetings with relatives and families during their visit  to Crimea.

 It is tragic to read this first-hand account of how, 15 years into the 21st Century, Russia’s actions in Ukraine have led to such a deterioration in the human rights of the Tartars.  More than a year on, the report makes clear that the Tartars continue to suffer thanks to Russia’s actions in the illegally annexed territory of Crimea.
Follow Leigh Turner on Twitter at @leighturnerFCO
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