Tatar leader slams Russia's suspension of Crimea Mejlis
Move to suspend Mejlis of Crimean Tatar People 'declaration of war,' Tatar leader Kirimoglu says
Tatar leader Mustafa Abduldzhemil Dzhemilev Kirimoglu has slammed Russia’s suspension of Crimean’s supreme executive commission.
A Russia-backed prosecutor in Crimea suspended the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People Wednesday to “prevent violations of the federal laws”.
Addressing World Crimean Tatar Congress in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius on Thursday, Kirimoglu termed the move a “declaration of war”.
Later, in an interview with Anadolu Agency, Kirimoglu, who is a former Mejlis head and member of Ukrainian parliament, said “[Russia] considers us an extremist terrorist group...to suspend our Mejlis means suspending all Tatar people”.
He said the Russian media launched a smear campaign against Tatar leaders and institutions.
He said that human rights violations were on the rise in the annexed region, including police raids on people's homes becoming part of normal life.
Kirimoglu called for sanctions to end the occupation of Crimea. “The most prudent way is sanctions which should remain in force until the occupant country [Russia] has retreated,” Kirimoglu said.
On Feb. 15, Russia-backed prosecutor, Natalya Poklonskaya, filed a lawsuit at the Crimean High Court to recognize the Tatar Mejlis as an extremist organization and demanded its closure. The first hearing was held on March 3, and since then the case examination has been postponed four times on various grounds.
Poklonskaya’s ruling to suspend the activity of Tatar Mejlis will remain valid until Crimea’s Supreme Court announces its decision.
Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic described the move as being "against justice and human rights.
"We regard the lawsuit as a new link of the oppression and suppression acts of the existing authorities in the peninsula towards Crimean Tatars, who are the primary components of Crimea."
He said Turkey would continue "to support – under all circumstances – the protection of the legitimate rights and existence of Crimean Tatars in the peninsula".
Kirimoglu earlier said courts in the annexed region were simply obeying orders of Moscow. He said the decision to suspend the activity of Mejlis was in violation, even of Russian law. “If you have filed a lawsuit, the result should be awaited,” he said, adding: “This decision shows to the world, who Russia is.”
About the restrictions on the body, the prosecutor had said: “The association is banned from using all state and municipal media; it can’t hold various public mass events, use bank accounts or conduct any type of work. All its propaganda will be prohibited.”
In March 2014, Putin signed into law a deal, according to which the Ukraine’s autonomous Republic of Crimea joined the Russian Federation, following a referendum held in the peninsula. The move was strongly opposed by Ukraine, the EU and the U.S. who put sanctions on Moscow.
The Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People consists of 33 members, including the chairman. It says it aims to eliminate “the consequences of the genocide, committed by the Soviet state against Crimean Tatars, restore the national and political rights of the Crimean Tatar people and implement its right to free national self-determination in its national territory”.