Human rights activist: Abkhazia's and South Ossetia's sovereignty more legitimate than Kosovo's
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“Presuming that Kosovo will
incite separatist moods in other peoples, including the Abkhazian ans
South Ossetian ones, is wrong. In fact, Abkhazia, for instance, has
always had more grounds and more arguments for self-determination.
And the recent statement of the State Duma deputies who have
supported the striving of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdnestr to
independence is very timely,” head of Kabardino-Balkarian Human
Rights Center Valery Khatazhukov.
”The statement is, of
course, of more a rhetoric character than many hoped it would be.
Many hoped that it would contain more clear recommendations for the
executive power. But anyhow, this is a positive moment that gives us
an opportunity to work with the situation at the federal level,” Mr
Khatazhukov observed.
Abkhazia had once joined the
USSR as an independent republic. Later, Joseph Stalin annexed it to
Georgia. Today, when the USSR is extinct, Abkhazia has no formal
grounds to the return of this status. However, for the last 15 years,
Abkhazia has proved that she has all the normally-functioning
organizations of an independent state, Mr Khatazhukov has reminded.
“Some see contradictions
between international principles of self-determination and
preservation of territorial integrity of states. As a matter of fact,
there are no contradictions. The principle of self-determination is
consistently recognized in the provisions of international
organizations, first of all, in the UN bylaws. It is even possible to
say that it prevails. Territorial integrity of Georgia can only be
violated if Abkhazia or South Ossetia joined Russia, i. e., were
annexed,” Mr Khatazhukov argues.
According to the human
rights activist, argument that the Abkhazian and South Ossetian
precedents could lead to the disintegration of the Russian Federation
is also ungrounded. “Separatist moods can be provoked by the
federal authority itself, if it pursues incompetent national policies
inside the Russian state.”
“This could be the result
of integration of territorial units, which questions the possibility
of preservation of cultural values, of cultural identification of
various peoples populating Russia, including the peoples of the
Northern Caucasus.”
“Besides, facts of
xenophobia have become more frequent, which are not terminated by the
government. Most eminent are the anti-Caucasian pronouncements of
Zhirinovsky who suggests that the problems of the North Caucasus be
solved by deportation of peoples residing in the region to outside
the Caucasian Mountains. And Zhirinovsky is a head of a parliamentary
party,” Khatazhukov noted.
“Besides, separatism may be
incited by thwarting national development programs, including a
number of hours for the study of indigenous people's languages,”
the rights activist argues. “If in early 1990s, up to 70% of
schools performed instruction in the primary school in the Kabardian
and Balkarian Languages, now the percentage is becoming lower,”
Khatazhukov stressed.