Crimean Tatar leader, Ukrainian
presidential envoy for Crimean Tatar People's affairs, and Ukrainian Member of
Parliament from the Bloc of Petro Poroshenko Mustafa Dzhemilev said that since
the beginning of the Russian annexation of Crimea, at least 10,000 Crimean
Tatars have fled Crimea, according to RFE/RL.
"Tough discrimination and lawlessness against the Crimean Tatars,
especially the kidnapping and murder of young people; forced recruitment of
young people into the army with a view to sending them to war with their
brothers, the Ukrainians; the complete absence of democratic freedoms and the
lack of any prospects for young people in occupied Crimea are forcing many to
leave their homeland again and move to the Ukrainian mainland," Dzhemilev
said at the second World Congress of Crimean Tatars in Ankara.
He noted that after the so-called "Crimean Spring" 76 families
attempted to return to the peninsula from places of deportation, but none of
them were allowed to settle in Crimea, as "the annual quota" had been
reached, so they all had had to go back. According to Dzhemilev, up to 2,000
people per year used to resettle in Crimea in recent years.
"One gets a clear and rightly impression that the iniquity against
Crimean Tatars takes place, including with the purpose to drive them beyond
Crimea", said Dzhemilev.
According to him, today a large number of ethnic Russians from Russia
and also refugees from the conflict areas of Donbas are being brought to
Crimea.
As UNIAN reported earlier, after Russia annexed Crimea, 15,000 Crimean Tatars had to leave their
home from February 27, 2014, until today [according to different estimates,
from 235,000 to 280,000 Crimean Tatars lived before the annexation].
Russia barred the leaders of the Crimean Tatar People from entering
Crimea, and the democratically elected Qurultay and the Mejlis of the Crimean
Tatar People [the single highest executive-representative body of the Crimean
Tatars in period between sessions of the Qurultay], which became examples of
self-government of indigenous peoples, were deprived of the opportunity to
continue work, and their assets were confiscated.
The second World Congress of the
Crimean Tatars is held July 31 through August 2 in the capital of Turkey,
Ankara, which is home to the largest diaspora of Crimean Tatars.
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