Moscow Times
November 25, 2000
EDITORIAL: Chechnya: Time to Say Enough
If the world needed yet another reminder of the scope of horror and suffering
being inflicted daily in Chechnya, it received one Wednesday in the form of
"Chechnya, the Politics of Terror," a report by the Nobe Prize-winning group
Medecins sans FrontiÅres.
"Despite the illusion of normalization upheld by the Russian authorities and
the resignation of the international community," the stark report says, "the
violence against civilians is ongoing." MSF says the war has resulted in
about 300,000 displaced persons who are now entering their second winter "in
appalling conditions."
MSF's report comes less than a month after a Human Rights Watch book,
"Welcome to Hell," which documented cases of torture and bribe-taking by
Russian military authorities at detention camps in Chechnya. Both reports
argue that a reign of terror the Russian military has established throughout
the republic is the main barrier preventing refugees from returning to their
homes.
And both reports criticize the international community f especially the
Council of Europe, the United Nations and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe f for doing so little to confront the Kremlin.
On Tuesday, The Moscow Times reported on a Chechen administration report
condemning the Russian military for "looting" the republic. That report
estimates that more than $2 billion in damage has been done to the Chechen
energy sector in the last year.
It claims that shipments of metals and oil regularly leave the republic on
military transport. It even documents an instance in which Russian troops
fired on Chechen authorities who were trying to stop thieves from siphoning
oil from a well.
While the Russian army is richly profiting from the reign of terror described
in the MSF report, the European Union has announced it will provide an
additional $4.8 million in food assistance to refugees who want to return
home but cannot.
Surely the world can come up with a better solution than this.
In a meeting this week with leading generals, President Vladimir Putin urged
"the anti-terrorist operation must be followed through to the end." When
asked what comes next, he answered, "Chechnya's formal status is not so
important today."
From this and many other statements, it is obvious the Kremlin has no plan
for Chechnya other than continued warfare and official terror. The Russian
public, which has no access to the truth about Chechnya and little influence
with the authorities in any case, is in no position to demand an accounting.
Only the international community can. Why does it not act?