Over the past 15 years, Mr. Putin has built a system in Russia in which
opposition voices are silenced, individual rights are trampled on, freedom of
expression is restricted, organized crime is rampant and property rights are
arbitrarily enforced. Since Russia annexed Crimea, Mr. Putin has imported the
same grotesque mode of governance to the peninsula.
Many of the so-called self-defense forces that sprang up a year ago,
alongside Mr. Putin’s “little green men” (as the unmarked Russian armed forces
are colloquially known), were the foot soldiers of Crimea’s criminal gangs. The
region’s elite has long had a close relationship with organized crime. Various
news organizations have reported that Mr. Putin’s handpicked leader in Crimea,
Sergei V. Aksyonov, was known in mafia circles as “the Goblin” in the 1990s.
(Mr. Aksyonov has denied links to organized crime.)
According to Mark Galeotti, a professor of global affairs at New York
University, “Many of the burly and well-armed ‘self-defense volunteers’ who
came out on the streets alongside the not-officially Russian troops turned out
to be local gangsters.” Over the last year, many have been drafted into a
quasi-policing role in Crimea, their paramilitary units renamed the “people’s
militia.”
Since last March, this force has conducted a series of raids and property
seizures. Immediately after annexation, Russia swiftly assumed control of
several Ukrainian state-owned industrial interests; it soon shifted its focus
to private enterprises. In August, the headquarters of Zaliv, Crimea’s largest
civilian shipbuilder, were stormed, as part of a campaign to force the
management to hand over control to a Moscow-based company. According to
estimates from local sources, the total value of losses accrued as a result of
real estate and other asset expropriation in Crimea is more than $1 billion.
As part of this, Crimea’s authorities forced Ukrainian banks operating on
the peninsula to close, including those belonging to Igor V. Kolomoisky, the
pro-Kiev governor of Dnipropetrovsk in eastern Ukraine. In their place, Russian
ones have moved in — among them, the Russian National Commercial Bank.
According to The Moscow Times, Crimean authorities acquired this little-known
subsidiary of the Bank of Moscow “just weeks after Russia seized the peninsula.
They then presided over its growth from one of the country’s smallest banks to
become Crimea’s largest bank.”
The Kremlin has seized control of the peninsula’s
media, taking Ukrainian TV channels off the air and replacing them with
state-backed Russian ones. In August, Crimea’s authorities raided the
independent Chernomorska broadcaster, impounding its equipment and computers,
and sealing off its building. Elsewhere, journalists have been pressured to toe
the Kremlin’s line. According to Kyiv Post, an English-language newspaper, the
Ukraine-based Center for Investigative Journalism recorded 85 incidents of
harassment and censorship against reporters in Crimea during March 2014 alone.
Human Rights Watch has reported that the peninsula’s
pro-Russian paramilitary groups are implicated in the disappearance of a number
of pro-Ukrainian activists. In March, Andriy Shekun and Anatoly Kovalksy were
abducted from a train station in Simferopol, Crimea’s capital, and held for 11
days in detention where they were beaten and shot at with low-velocity handguns
(designed to cause trauma but not kill). Mr. Shekun was subjected to electric
shocks on two occasions, according to the rights group.
The people who have borne the worst of Russia’s
annexation are Crimea’s native Tatars. Since March, several Tatar activists
have been abducted, some of them killed — including Reshat Ametov, who was
detained during a Simferopol protest in March, and was later found murdered.
Two of the community’s most prominent leaders, Mustafa Dzhemilev and Refat
Chubarov, have been barred by Crimea’s authorities from entering the peninsula.
In September, Russian security forces raided the headquarters of the Mejlis,
the Tatars’ representative body, as well as the home of one of its members,
Eskender Bariev.
Institutions that are not explicitly pro-Russian are
also regularly targeted for intimidation and harassment. Ukrainian-language
teaching has disappeared from school curriculums, while the Ukrainian Orthodox
Church, most of which broke away from Russian Orthodoxy in the early 1990s, has
been forced to close 11 of its 18 parishes.
America’s assistant secretary of state for the region,
Victoria Nuland, said at a congressional hearing this month that as a result of
Russia’s actions, Crimea was “suffering a reign of terror.” She was right.
Condemned in the West a year ago as a flagrant breach
of international law, Russia’s annexation of Crimea has fallen down the
international agenda as the situation in Ukraine has evolved. Western diplomacy
has focused instead on trying to stop a deterioration of the situation in
southeastern Ukraine. Yet the West should take a careful look at what is
happening in Crimea:
The fate of the annexed peninsula could very likely
prefigure what is in store for the secessionist Donetsk and Luhansk people’s
republics.
In January, the European Council’s president, Donald
Tusk, appeared to accuse some European Union leaders of favoring a policy of
“appeasement” with Russia, and warned against any watering down of economic
sanctions. But the fact that Crimea was not mentioned in either of the
cease-fire deals known as Minsk I, signed last September, or Minsk II, agreed
to in February, is a form of appeasement in itself. That Western countries are
highly unlikely to grant official recognition to Russia’s control over Crimea
does nothing to change this.
The fear in Western capitals last year was that Crimea
might be only the first of many land grabs planned by Mr. Putin against
Russia’s near neighbors. And so it has proved.
Last week, Russia violated Georgia’s sovereignty when
it signed an accord with the leadership of South Ossetia, integrating the breakaway
republic with Russia. This followed the signing last year of a similar
agreement with Abkhazia, another breakaway region of Georgia. In Moldova,
meanwhile, the Kremlin continues to tolerate corruption and criminality as the
engine of Transnistria’s economy, and to block progress by the country’s
reform-minded government.
If the West is serious about halting the growth of a
Russian regime that poses a threat to the citizens not only of Russia and
Ukraine but also elsewhere, it must begin by remembering that Crimea matters.
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