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Russia: IOM Expects Up To 10K Meskhetians To Apply For U.S. Refugee

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  • Russia: IOM Expects Up To 10K Meskhetians To Apply For U.S. Refugee

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    April 29 2004

    Russia: IOM Expects Up To 10,000 Meskhetians To Apply For U.S.
    Refugee Status

    By Jean-Christophe Peuch


    The United States says it is ready to extend refugee status to
    thousands of Meskhetians from Russia's Krasnodar region, an area that
    human rights groups have long been denouncing as being a hotbed of
    ethnic discrimination. Although they would rather remain in the
    region or return to their historic homeland of Georgia, many
    Meskhetians are likely to accept the offer for want of viable
    alternatives.


    Prague, 29 April 2004 (RFE/RL) -- The International Organization for
    Migration (IOM) has initiated a program designed to help Meskhetians
    from Russia's southern Krasnodar region migrate to the United States.


    The program was officially launched on 16 February on behalf of the
    U.S. government. Applications will be received by the IOM
    headquarters in Moscow, which will in turn hand them over to the U.S.
    Department of Homeland Security for clearance.

    "We have -- since the opening [of the program] on the 16th of
    February -- [received], I would say, upwards of 1,700 [family]
    applications. Normally there [are] about three persons per
    application, so it is more than 5,000 individuals who have applied so
    far."Selected applicants will then be allowed to enter American soil
    under the U.S. Refugee Program, which grants asylum to individuals it
    deems have been persecuted on account of race, religion, nationality,
    or for political reasons.

    Under U.S. rules, eligibility for refugee status is decided on a
    case-by-case basis.

    Upon arrival, immigrants will be assigned to private voluntary
    agencies that will provide initial resettlement services, such as
    housing, food, clothing, and other basic necessities.

    The IOM will help arrange for the transportation of immigrants, who
    in turn will be expected to repay the cost of their transfer.
    Meskhetians will be eligible for permanent resident status one year
    after their arrival and, after another four years, for American
    citizenship.

    Mark Getchell is the head of the IOM mission in Russia. He tells
    RFE/RL many Krasnodar Meskhetians seem willing to apply for refugee
    status in the United States.

    "We have -- since the opening [of the program] on the 16th of
    February -- [received], I would say, upwards of 1,700 [family]
    applications. Normally there [are] about three persons per
    application, so it is more than 5,000 individuals who have applied so
    far," Getchell says.

    Getchell says the IOM expects up to 10,000 individuals to volunteer
    for resettlement by the program's mid-August application deadline --
    which may be extended if deemed necessary.

    Only those Meskhetians who have no legal status are eligible for the
    refugee program. Unless they are married to an individual who has no
    legal status, U.S. authorities will not consider the case of those
    Meskhetians who enjoy civil rights under Russian laws.

    Russian authorities claim they have granted citizenship to some 4,000
    Meskhetians and are currently in the process of reviewing a few
    hundred more cases.

    "The problem of the Meskhetians is closed and no longer exists," says
    Deputy Interior Minister Alexander Chekalin, referring last January
    to a newly effective law that reportedly makes it easier for former
    Soviet citizens to obtain Russian citizenship.

    Chekalin's remarks are symptomatic of the attitude of many
    post-Soviet governments towards Meskhetians.

    Today's Meskhetians -- also known as Meskhis -- are the survivors or
    the descendants of a roughly 100,000-strong rural Muslim population
    of southern Georgia that Soviet leader Josef Stalin ordered deported
    on 15 November 1944.

    Although Meskhetians themselves disagree on whether they descend from
    ethnic Turks sent to Georgia under Ottoman rule or Islamicized
    Georgians, they are generally described as "Turks" and perceived as
    such in most of the former Soviet Union.

    The Meskhetians have been uprooted twice over the past six decades.

    In 1989, after bloody pogroms that claimed dozens of lives in Central
    Asia's Ferghana Valley, tens of thousands of Meskhetians were forced
    to leave Uzbekistan and resettle in other areas, mainly in Azerbaijan
    and Russia's Krasnodar region.

    Estimates put the number of Meskhetians living in CIS countries at
    somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000.

    Sixty years after their deportation, the Meskhetians are the only
    ethnic group among World War II-era "punished peoples" -- as the late
    historian Alexander Nekrich once described them -- that is still
    awaiting an official pronouncement that their deportation for alleged
    collaboration with German occupation forces was unjustified.

    Under a commitment made upon its entry into the Council of Europe in
    1999, Georgia is expected to provide a legal basis for the return of
    Meskhetians with a view to organizing their collective repatriation.

    Yet, very little has been done so far and the number of Meskhetians
    who have returned individually to Georgia does not exceed a few
    dozen.

    Some 15,000 Meskhetians are believed to live in Russia's Krasnodar
    region.

    Like other non-Slav refugees and displaced persons, most Krasnodar
    Meskhetians have been denied civic rights and suffer from isolation
    and xenophobic attitudes fueled by the local administration.

    Krasnodar Governor Aleksander Tkachev maintains that his tough stance
    on refugees and immigrants has the backing of Russian President
    Vladimir Putin. Although the Kremlin denies the claim, rights groups
    blame Putin for failing to publicly disavow Krasnodar authorities.

    Marat Baratashvili is the chairman of the Tbilisi-based Union of
    Georgian Repatriates, a nongovernmental group that advocates the
    return of Meskhetians to their original homeland. Baratashvili,
    himself an ethnic Meskhetian, tells our correspondent he has
    reservations about the U.S. resettlement program.

    “I view this program with circumspection,” he says. “In itself, this
    idea is not bad. But it would have been better for the Meskhetians if
    their rights in Russia had been respected and if their rights in
    Georgia had been restored. In that case, the [U.S.] program would
    have been a wonderful thing. But under the present conditions it has
    nothing to do with respect of human rights. Apparently, it is a
    political decision made by the United States and Russia. The aim is
    to take this problematic issue away from the [Krasnodar] region and
    make things easier for Georgia too.”

    Two years ago, after dozens of Krasnodar Meskhetians went on a hunger
    strike to protest discrimination from local authorities, Putin
    pledged to set up a special commission to examine their claims.

    But during a visit to the region in October 2003, the Russian
    president did not signal any apparent willingness to address the
    Meskhetian issue.

    Talking before an assembly of Kuban Cossacks, Putin urged Georgian
    authorities to take their responsibilities and provide for a quick
    return of the Meskhetian population.

    Yet, the Georgian leadership in turn gave no indication it would take
    immediate action.

    Then President Eduard Shevardnadze said Georgia could not face
    another influx of migrants until it finds a solution to the many
    problems posed by tens of thousands of displaced persons from the
    separatist republic of Abkhazia.

    Georgian authorities also say they fear Meskhetians might claim
    ownership of lands and houses located in their home region of
    Samtskhe-Javakheti and create problems with the local Armenian
    population.

    The new government that took over from the Shevardnadze
    administration last November has carefully avoided raising the
    Meskhetian issue.

    In the words of Levan Berdzenishvili, a civil rights campaigner close
    to Georgia's current leaders, the Meskhetian problem is so
    controversial that "any government that would try to solve it must be
    ready to leave power."

    Georgia's Prime news agency quoted Berdzenishvili as saying last
    October, "This issue must be settled. However, no one would ever
    forgive any government for trying to solve it."

    IOM mission head Getchell, however, believes the U.S. government
    hopes that by taking a few thousands refugees it would help improve
    the fate of the majority of the Meskhetian population.

    "It is just hoped by the government of the U.S., I think, that taking
    [an] initial group might relieve some of the pressure in the
    [Krasnodar] region to the point where for local authorities -- and
    perhaps for Georgia -- the numbers [of Meskhetians remaining in the
    region] will be smaller and the solutions may be more easily
    attainable," Getchell said.

    Most Krasnodar Meskhetians reportedly see the U.S. refugee program as
    a painful opportunity to temporarily escape harassment from regional
    authorities.

    The Caucasian Knot information website quoted community leader Sarvar
    Tedorov as saying (27 Feb), "Our people [have been uprooted twice] in
    60 years and we do not want to [be uprooted] a third [time]. But if
    the Russian government and the administration of the Krasnodar
    [region] continue [with their policy toward the Meskhetians], we will
    have to leave, no matter where, to the U.S. or elsewhere."

    Baratashvili believes most of his ethnic kin would prefer remaining
    in the Krasnodar region with all rights due to Russian citizens, or
    return to Georgia.

    "My impression is that for them it is a temporary measure, a forced
    step. They are like a penned flock of sheep, which see that a gate
    has just opened in the fence. They rush toward that gate to escape
    the custody they live under in Krasnodar. They have the choice
    between dying there or going out toward freedom, even if this is a
    relative freedom because they still cannot return to Georgia,"
    Baratashvili says.

    Getchell of the IOM confirms that during talks with Krasnodar
    Meskhetians, he had the impression many saw the U.S. refugee program
    as a last-resort solution.

    Yet, unlike Baratashvili, he does not believe the resettlement
    initiative is an attempt at postponing the settlement of the
    Meskhetian issue.

    "What the U.S. is hoping is that this resettlement option is going to
    be part of a grander solution," he says.
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