Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Crimea: From Ottoman era to Russia referendum

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Crimea: From Ottoman era to Russia referendum

    Journal of Turkish Daily
    March 9 2014


    Crimea: From Ottoman era to Russia referendum

    9 March 2014

    Crimea's status is one of the hottest topics on the international
    agenda in the wake of the four month political crisis in Ukraine which
    saw the flight of pro-Russian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych.

    Crimea's parliament voted last Thursday in favor of joining Russia,
    and calls for a referendum on the region's future with Ukraine on
    March 16. Its decision comes as Russian armed forces continue to
    maintain their presence on the peninsula.

    Crimea has been under the control of many states during its history
    including the Huns, Khazars and the Byzantine Empire during the early
    and Middle Ages until it was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1475.

    Crimea was first given independence in 1774 with the Treaty of Kucuk
    Kaynarca between the Ottoman Empire and Russia, and then occupied by
    the Russians in 1783. Following Russia's occupation, the Turkish
    population in the city was forced to migrate and left for Turkey,
    Romania and Bulgaria.

    - Expulsion of Crimean Tatars under Stalin

    The Crimean Soviet Socialist Republic was created in November 1921
    following the 1917 Russian Revolution. Germany occupied Crimea in 1941
    during the Second World War and Russian Soviet Republic took it back
    in 1944, but not without deporting some 300,000 Crimean Tatars (a
    Turkic ethnic group), in the territory upon collaborating with Germans
    during the world war.

    The Soviet administration under Stalin then eliminated the Crimean
    Soviet Socialist Republic and gave provincial status to the region
    under the name 'Soviet Socialist Republic'.

    - Integration with Ukraine in Khrushchev era

    In 1954 Crimea was transferred to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
    Republic by the USSR as a "gift" by the then Soviet Russian leader,
    Nikita Khrushchev.

    In September 1967, Russia officially recognised the unfair treatment
    of Crimean Tatars during the Stalin era, but the return of Crimean
    Tatars to their homeland was not allowed at the time.

    Only after a Supreme Soviet decree on the recognition of the
    illegality of the indigenous population's forced resettlement and in
    recognition of their rights, Crimean Tatars began to return to their
    homeland in large numbers. The Tatar population reached 150,000 by
    1991, representing half the total Tatar population before Stalin
    managed to return their homeland.

    After a referendum in January 1991, the Crimean Soviet Socialist
    Republic was re-declared and the Ukrainian Soviet Republic decided on
    the establishment of Crimea Autonomous Region the same year to prevent
    Crimea passing under Russian control once again.

    The Mejlis (central executive body) of the Crimean Tatar People
    gathered in June 1991 in Crimea's capital and administrative center,
    Simferopol, under the leadership of human rights activist Mustafa
    Abdulcemil Kirimoglu.

    The parliamentary seats in the Crimean Republic were raised from 80 to
    98 in 1991. 14 seats were given to Crimean Tatars, while Greeks,
    Armenians, Germans and Bulgarians were given one seat each.

    Upon the decision to hold referendum to vote on the independence of
    Crimea, Ukrainian authorities abolished the Crimean constitution and
    presidency in March 1995. This was the first harsh reaction by Ukraine
    over pro-Russians in Crimea after the dissolution of the Soviet
    Republic.

    The vast majority of the Crimean Autonomous Republic's parliament, now
    under de-facto Russian control, comprise of ethnic Russians and
    Russian speakers, which make up 60 percent of the total Crimean
    population. Armed groups which later turned out to be Russian soldiers
    seized the parliamentary building on February 27, and after that,
    parliamentary sessions began to discuss Crimea's future. The Crimean
    parliament also elected a pro-Russian parliamentary speaker and prime
    minister unilaterally. However, referendum and elections in the region
    requires the Ukrainian government's approval. The Ukrainian government
    emphasizes that all decisions taken after February 27 in the Crimean
    parliament are unilateral and illegal.

    9 March 2014
    Anadolu Agency

    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/164262/crimea-from-ottoman-era-to-russia-referendum.html

Working...
X