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Vague Criteria, or Why Russia Should Be Consistent

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  • Vague Criteria, or Why Russia Should Be Consistent

    VAGUE CRITERIA, or WHY RUSSIA SHOULD BE CONSISTENT

    http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1395: vague-criteria-or-why-russia-should-be-consistent&catid=3:all&Itemid=4
    Saturday, 15 March 2014 12:33


    Exactly a day is left till the referendum on the future
    political status of the Crimea, which is to answer a single question:
    will Ukraine remain a unitary state or will the autonomy join Russia?
    In fact, the dynamics of the situation convincingly demonstrates that
    the further events will go on the second scenario.

    It is obvious for many people that the citizens of the Crimea, the
    overwhelming majority of which are Russians, will vote for the
    reunification of the peninsula with Russia, from the structure of
    which it was transferred to Ukraine in 1954.

    Such an outcome of the referendum scheduled for March 16 is confirmed
    also by the preliminary social survey among the Crimean voters, as a
    result of which 70-80% of the respondents stated their readiness to
    join the Russian Federation.

    We can definitely state that the Crimea's joining Russia will create
    quite a new geopolitical situation in the world. Ukraine has become
    the epicenter of the conflict of interests of the West and Russia.
    When putting aside the rhetoric with democratic touch and the
    conflicting parties' appeal to international law, which is interpreted
    by each of them in their own way, exclusively in their own favor, then
    the developing events can be viewed purely as a struggle of the West
    and Russia for influence in Ukraine. This process should be viewed in
    the context of division of the spheres of influence between Russia and
    the West as geopolitical centers of power, which started even before
    the collapse of the USSR and hasn't actually ended yet. The purpose of
    the Western coalition led by the U.S. is clear - to weaken Russia and
    in the future - to involve Ukraine in NATO, with the prospect of
    installing missiles along the perimeter of the Ukrainian-Russian
    border. For Russia, it is obvious that it lost the so-called mainland
    Ukraine after the violent overthrow of President Yanukovich and the
    pro-Western radicals' coming to power, and Moscow's current goal is to
    keep in the orbit of its interests, at least, the strategically
    important Crimea, with its pro-Russian population.

    We're not going to discuss now whether the Crimea's decision to join
    Russia is legitimately or not. If we consider the issue through the
    prism of one of the imperative principles of international law - the
    principle of self-determination of peoples, so we can state with some
    reservations that such a step by the Crimean autonomy does not
    contradict the rules of the UN Charter. Article 1 of the Pact on Human
    Rights of 1966 directly reads, "All peoples have the right to
    self-determination. In accordance with this right, they freely
    determine their political status and freely ensure their economic,
    social and cultural development". There is another problem - namely
    the international law enforcement practice. Here we come to the
    unpleasant thought that certain erosion of international law has taken
    place in the modern world.

    As is known, before the serious geopolitical tectonic processes
    related to the collapse of the USSR and Yugoslavia, an international
    security system based on the Helsinki Act of 1975 and signed by 33
    European states, as well as the United States and Canada acted in the
    world. According to many experts, recently the right of peoples to
    self-determination has pushed the principle of territorial integrity
    into the background. As a result, there are over 50 states today in
    Europe, due to the formation of new ones. And I must say that this
    process is not completed yet, as referendums on independence are also
    planned in Scotland and Catalonia. But the problem is that currently
    international law is applied selectively and is interpreted depending
    on who is backing the self-determining entity.

    Assessing the existing situation in the international jurisprudence,
    it is difficult to resist the temptation to make comparative analysis
    and parallels between different facts, strictly - acts of secession.
    We remember that when Nagorno Karabakh pointed out fairly to the
    Kosovo precedent, the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs responded that the
    comparison with Kosovo was incorrect. However, one can fully agree
    with such an opinion - in view that Artsakh, which has self-determined
    in its historic territory, has much more rights to independence than
    Kosovo, which has proclaimed its statehood on the native Serbian
    lands. We received a nearly similar answer, but already from Russia,
    after its recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. They didn't want to listen to our grounds on the perfect
    right of Artsakh to self-determination and sovereign statehood. In
    other words, the dual standards were acting, hiding behind the screen
    of international law.

    But, let's recall the Crimean situation. Listening to the current
    arguments of the Russian side for the resolution of the Crimean
    Supreme Council on joining Russia, we have the feeling of déjà vu, or
    repetition of the past. Our past. But, we are also sad and regretful.
    Over 20 years ago, Karabakh appealed to the same principles and norms
    of international law, to which Russia is sending its political
    opponents now. The top leadership of the Russian Federation has
    recognized the right of the Crimean people to self-determination.
    Speaker of the Upper Chamber of the Russian Parliament Valentina
    Matviyenko stated clearly that "the RF Federation Council will support
    the resolution of the Crimean Parliament on a referendum and this
    resolution will be legitimate", emphasizing that just a referendum is
    the basic criteria of expression of a people's will.

    Agree that quite an unpleasant situation has occurred for Russia -
    accusing today its political opponents of using dual standards,
    Russia, actually, did it yesterday itself. Will it be a lesson for the
    country? We believe that a universal approach should be used for the
    resolution of ethno-political conflicts, and Russia as a co-chair
    state of the OSCE Minsk Group should be consistent, basing on the key
    principle applied to the Crimea - a people should determine its fate
    independently.


    Leonid MARTIROSSIAN
    Editor-in-Chief of Azat Artsakh newspaper

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