We, the participants of the All-Russia Democratic
Assembly state herein that the strategy resolving the crisis in
Chechnya via military force has driven the situation into a deadlock.
The situation in Chechnya can only be resolved through a wide-ranging
political process, involving all the interested parties.
We think that it would be a political mistake to hold a referendum
in Chechnya without carrying out comprehensive preliminary preparatory
work. Obviously sooner or later a referendum on the constitution
[of Chechnya] will be required, but against the background of
war such a referendum will not guarantee any resolultion of the
Chechen crisis, and is most likely to have the opposite effect
and can endanger the process of political regulation there.
The holding of any referenda in the present conditions in Chechnya
- " the mop-up operations, road blocks and settlements by
troops, the virtually functioning of a curfew - " all this
is categorically prohibited, and for good reason, by international
norms and Russian law today.
The long-term implications of an ill-timed and unprepared referendum
and the decisions adopted after this referendum that can aggravate
the opposition inside the Chechen community and play into the
hands of the forces interested in civil war, are especially dangerous.
In such a situation it will be virtually impossible to restore
the economy of Chechnya. A vicious circle of problems emerges:
it is impossible to attract specialists and restore industry,
financial and social institutions until there is a halt to terror
in the Republic. The lack of jobs, social guarantees and education
give rise in turn to crime and create a nourishing ground for
terrorism.
It would also be wrong to exclude international participation
from regulation of the situation in Chechnya.
Preparations for the referendum have already provoked tough measures
for a [forceful] return to Chechnya of the refugees residing in
Ingushetia, as well as compulsion to voting and pressure on many
public organisations in Chechnya. There is pressure on the work
of journalists, especially those who disagree at times with the
official opinion of the interior, defence and security agencies.
We think that both the citizens living in Chechnya at present
and also all citizens who had to leave the republic after 1991,
irrespective of their present place of residence and nationality,
should be allowed to participate in the referendum on the adoption
of the Constitution of the Chechen Republic.
If the Constitution of the Chechen Republic is adopted at the
referendum without discussion, not only by the votes of the residents
of Chechnya of all nationalities, but also by a large number of
votes by the federal group of forces, such an imitation of a referendum
is unlikely to put an end to war. Obviously any Constitution adopted
in this way will not be recognized by a considerable share of
the population of Chechnya and the international community. Consequently
the conditions for a continuation in military operations will
remain.
The Democratic Assembly calls attention to the mass-scale disappearance
of civilians detained by the federal troops and consequently expresses
its concerns over the detention of two well-known human rights
activists in Chechnya -Sulmbek Tashtamirov and Imran Ezhiyev -
who conducted propaganda against the referendum and whose location
is unknown at present.
In our opinion, the beginning of the peace process in Chechnya
should include the following:
- The parties fighting in Chechnya agree to a cease-fire and
conclude a truce which envisages both the termination of partisan
actions and military operations by the federal troops, including
mop-ups of Chechen settlements, as well as termination by both
the sides of torture, executions, kidnappings, violence and robbery,
and begin negotiations without any preliminary conditions to determine
the principles and stages for implementing the peace process in
Chechnya.
- The next stage of political regulation of the crisis in Chechnya
could be a peace conference involving all the opposing and interested
parties.
We, the participants of the All-Russia Democratic Assembly,
think that such a peaceful conference (round-table talks, meeting)
with the maximum broad framework of the discussions and range
of participants, would be the best first public political step
in the process of peaceful regulation in Chechnya. The correct
approaches to continuing the peaceful process can be developed
at such a conference, including the holding of referenda and other
democratic procedures.
Forward, Russia movement (leader Boris Fyodorov),
Choice of Russia movement (Pavel Medvedyev),
Democratic Russia movement (Lev Ponomaryov),
Democratic Union (Valeria Novodvorskaya),
Union in Defence of Human Rights -The Initiative Group vCommon
Action (Sergei Kovalyov),
Confederation of Consumer Unions (Alexander Auzan),
Coordination Council for Aid to Refugees and Forced Migrants
(Lidia Grafova),
Farmers Party of Russia (Yuri Chernichenko),
Liberal Russia Party (Sergei Yushenkov),
Memorial (Oleg Orlov),
Party of Economic Freedom (Konstantin Borovoi),
Public organisation "The Right to Life and Civil Dignity"
(Viktor Kogan-Yasny),
Russian Human Rights Research Centre (Valentina Melnikova) ,
Social and Ecological Union (Svaytoslav Zabelin),
Journalists Union of Russia (Igor Yakovenko),
Union of Right-Wing Forces (represeted by Alexei Kara-Murza and
Alexander Kotyusov),
Glasnost Protection Fund (Alexei Simonov),
Individual participants: Yuri Afansyev, Yuri Ryzhov, Alexander
Yakovlev.
* In the vote for the statement, the YABLOKO party, the Russian
Joint Social-Democratic Party, the Republican Party and Leonid
Batkin acting as an individual participant, abstained.
Under the regulations of the Democratic Assembly, if the
majority votes for a decision and none of the participants vetoes
this decision, it is considered adopted.
Explaining at a press conference the position of the YABLOKO
party, Deputy Head of the Party Igor Artemyev said that ?In general
we support the adopted statement, but we think that a peaceful
conference must be chaired by the President of Russia, as this
is the only way to guarantee that the decisions adopted at the
conference are real and will be implemented.
See also:
Democratic
Assembly
War
in Chechnya
Press Release, March
17, 2003. The Fifth Meeting of the All-Russia Democratic Assembly
adopted a statement on how to resolve the crisis in Chechnya.
Politbureau". March 17, 2003. Grigory Yavlinsky: "Mop-ups, robberies
and violence should be stopped."
AFP, March 17, 2003. Putin
offers Chechens sweeping autonomy under new constitution.
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