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Rus Accused of Sacrificing Russians for Oil & Gas in Turkmen UN Vote

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  • Rus Accused of Sacrificing Russians for Oil & Gas in Turkmen UN Vote

    MOSCOW ACCUSED OF SACRIFICING RUSSIANS FOR OIL AND GAS IN TURKMEN UN VOTE

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Moscow
    23 Apr 04

    Moscow abstained in a recent UN vote condemning human rights abuses in
    Turkmenistan, even though the Russophone community is among those
    being persecuted. It has thus placed oil and gas deals with President
    Nyyazow's resource-rich country above the interests of its own people,
    a national newspaper commented. The following is an excerpt from a
    report by the Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta on 23 April:

    The UN Human Rights Commission recently passed a toughly-worded
    resolution in Geneva, condemning the violation of human rights in
    Turkmenistan, with 25 countries voting for, 11 against, and 17
    abstaining. The document cites unacceptable "discrimination in
    education and employment of ethnic Russians, Uzbeks, and other
    national minorities", "arbitrary arrests, incarceration, and curtailed
    freedom to obtain information and self-expression".

    The abstaining countries included Russia, whose citizens living in
    Turkmenistan are considered people of second quality and know
    first-hand what discrimination is. It seems that a hypothetical
    opportunity to take part in the development of Turkmenistan's energy
    resources looks much more attractive to Moscow than the protection of
    its own citizens.

    The official position of Moscow was voiced by Russian Deputy Foreign
    Minister Yuriy Fedotov, who declared: "Basically, we proceed from the
    fact that so-called 'country-specific resolutions,' particularly those
    made by the UN Human Rights Commission, can hardly improve the real
    situation."

    It is unclear how much attention Moscow paid to the fact that in
    appreciation of the support he received from Russia, Turkmenbasy
    (President Nyyazow) ordered yet another fountain in place of the
    recently demolished Russian Theatre of Drama in Asgabat. It seems that
    the Russian-speaking people have become accustomed to absolute
    indifference displayed by their historical homeland to their problems
    and do not count on help from bureaucrats from the Russian foreign
    ministry or the Kremlin.

    Russia's indifference unties Nyyazow's hands, and as a result the
    discrimination of ethnic minorities in Turkmenistan is worsening. In
    particular, specialists who graduated from higher education
    institutions after 1993 outside Turkmenistan are to be dismissed by 22
    May of this year. Members of national minorities are not allowed to
    hold positions in financial and military authorities, the judicial
    system, or the police and other security services. Teachers and
    doctors have been dismissed as well. In an overwhelming majority of
    cases, those are Russians, Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Armenians, and people of
    mixed parentage. Even if one of the parents is Turkmen, more lenient
    treatment should not be expected.

    Naturally, Nyyazow has not reacted in any way to yet more criticism
    from the international community. (Passage omitted)

    Notably, Ukraine proved one of the 11 countries sympathizing with
    Turkmenbasy. Similar to Moscow, Kiev hopes to sign a gas contract for
    25 years. It is unclear, however, whether Turkmenistan has enough gas
    for everyone who wants it. (Passage omitted)
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