You're reading: Crimean Tatars, despite call for autonomy, face dilemma in relations with Russia: cooperate or boycott?

Bakhchisaray, Crimea --  As the reality of having to live in another country begins to sink in for Crimeans, one ethnic group, the Crimean Tatars, are reviving a long-held dream: to live autonomously on the peninsula.

At a March
29 session in the historical Crimean Tatar capital of Bakhchisaray, the Kurultay,
or Crimean Tatar national council, approved a resolution to press for self-determination
and national territorial autonomy in Crimea.

“It is now
clear to all who based their decisions on the right to self-determination, that
they must understand the Crimean Tatar people have that exact same right,” said
Refat Chubarov, head of the Crimean Tatar Mejlis, in a clear reference to
Russia’s justification of its incursion into Crimea a month ago.

While
Russia claims it annexed Crimea to protect the rights of ethnic Russians on the
peninsula, the Crimean Tatars have long asked both the Soviet Union, and then Ukraine,
to recognize their right to Crimean autonomy.

Muslim Tatars attend the Crimean Tatar Qurultai, or congress, in Bakhchisaray, Crimea, on March 29, 2014. Ethnic Tatars from all over Crimea convened in the town of Bakhchisaray for an emergency Qurultai to decide on the fate of the Muslim community of about 300,000 people on the Black Sea peninsula, by holding a vote on whether to push for self-rule in their historic homeland following its annexation by Russia. AFP PHOTO / DMITRY SEREBRYAKOV

A Turkic,
Muslim people, they represent around 12 percent of the Crimean population of
two million people, but consider Crimea their historical homeland. In 1944 the
entire population was deported to Siberia or Central Asia on Josef Stalin’s
orders.

After
decades of peaceful protest, around 200,000 finally returned in the early 1990s.
They continued to demand, largely in vain, that the Ukrainian government
recognize their historic claim to Crimea and guarantee protection of their
language and culture.

Since
Russian troops effectively took over a month ago, the Crimean Tatars have
suddenly become a political force to be reckoned with. The Mejlis (their
political arm) declared the new Crimean government and the March 16 referendum
illegal, and called for a national boycott which the vast majority of Tatars
upheld. Meanwhile, both Russia and Ukraine began to woo the Crimean Tatars with
promises of representation and protection.

Ukraine
adopted a resolution recognizing the Crimean Tatars as the indigenous people of
Crimea on March 20. For most Crimean Tatars, it was almost an insult, coming
after 23 years of prevarication. However, it does open the door to declaring
Crimean Tatar autonomy in Crimea, should Ukrainian law be reasserted on the
peninsula.

“We’ll
appeal to all governments that are directly involved, and that will be Ukraine
first of all, to be governed by our resolution,” Chubarov told the Kyiv Post.
“The processes that are happening now have speeded everything up. It’s made
some people seriously engage with areas they should have engaged with 20 years
ago.”

Russian
President Vladimir Putin has also said that he recognizes Crimean Tatar rights
to representation in government and education in their own language. Tatar
representatives from the Russian Federal Republic of Tatarstan have flocked to
Crimea, talking of brotherhood and cooperation in religious, business and
cultural spheres. The new Crimean parliament has said it will allocate a 20
percent quota for Crimean Tatar representatives.

Nevertheless,
most Crimean Tatars realize that while today’s situation in Crimea may be their
opportunity to reach their dream, the Kurultay resolution is mostly
declarative.

“Nothing
has been decided, it’s all under question,” said Gerai Abduliev of Bakhchisaray.
“But everything is possible in this world. Who would have thought we could turn
out to be in Russia? If that’s possible, then so is autonomy. So far it’s a formality,
but a formality can lead to real action.”

The
Kurultay resolution references the 2007 United Nations declaration which states
that indigenous people have the right to self-determination; to autonomy and
self-government; to full engagement in political, economic, social and cultural
life; that military activity on their land can take place only with their
permission or at their request; and that they have full access to decision
making and conflict resolution with their own and other governments. It
announces the start of political and legal procedures to establish autonomy on
their historical land of Crimea, including appealing to international organizations
and governments for support.

Herein lies
a dilemma which the Kurultay continued to debate long after the resolution had
been approved. The international community has not so far come to their aid. Whether
they like it or not, de facto and according to Russian law, Crimea is now part of
the Russian Federation. The Crimean Tatars are faced with a choice – to
cooperate with the new Crimean authorities within a Russian legal and actual
framework in order to protect and promote their rights, or to boycott a
government and legal process they consider illegitimate.

The choice
directly affects not just their political leaders or those working in district authorities
and state structures, but every single Crimean Tatar who must now decide whether
taking a Russian passport is necessity or betrayal.

After many
hours of heated debate, the Kurultay finally deputised the Mejlis to decide whether
Crimean Tatars will participate in the new Crimean government. But Chubarov’s position
is clear: that Crimean Tatars have to be represented at all levels of power.
“It was a very difficult discussion, about how ethical or moral it is to put
forward candidates to those organs that…have questionable legitimacy,” he said.
“But the discussion is centred on facts that have happened and that we have to
recognise: not their legitimacy, but their existence.”

Meanwhile,
he said whether to take a Russian passport was every person’s individual decision,
but he advised not to give up Ukrainian passports. “Say you lost them,” he told
the Kurultay. “If Russia can lose its troops in Crimea, I think we can lose a
few passports.”

Crimean
Tatars who had met together to plant trees outside the mosque in Bakhchisaray, were
divided on the Kurultay session. Beset by practical questions with no answers
about land registration, house ownership, bank accounts, their children’s
education, their sons’ service in the Russian army, they had little time to
celebrate the prospect of autonomy and most agreed reluctantly with Chubarov’s
pragmatic approach to the new authorities.

“We have to
cooperate with them to decide these problems,” said Abduliev, planting hazel
trees with his son. “Whatever they are, they’re still in power de facto and we
can’t get away from that. We’re already cooperating, we’re in talks with them,
we’re living in that legal framework already.”

“I feel
like [the Kurultay] shouldn’t cooperate but they decided otherwise,” added  pensioner Dilyaver Aliev. “This is how we live
now, we have no choice. Autonomy would be very good, we wanted it for so many
years. But it’s not good that we are no longer in Ukraine. We are closer to
Ukrainians, we’ve been with them for 25 years, we have a lot in common. And now
we have to give up our Ukrainian passports and take Russian ones, or else what
do we do – leave Crimea? We can’t do that, we should live here.”

Kyiv Post staff writer Lily Hyde can be reached
at 
[email protected]

 

Editor’s Note: This
article has been produced with support from the project 
www.mymedia.org.ua, financially supported by the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of Denmark, and implemented by a joint venture between NIRAS and BBC
Media Action.The content in this article may not necessarily reflect the views
of the Danish government, NIRAS and BBC Action Media.