Issue #1537 (99), Tuesday, December 22, 2009
 

NEWS

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Poles, Kadyrov Trade Barbs

The St. Petersburg Times

Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov and Poland’s foreign minister traded barbs after Kadyrov, who has been linked to human rights abuses in Chechnya, accused Poland of violating the rights of Chechen refugees.

Kadyrov said he has “regularly heard that Chechen refugees in Poland are living in miserable conditions” and a group of Chechens must have been desperate for trying to take a protest about Polish conditions to Strasbourg before being stopped at Poland’s border earlier in the week.

“We do not force anybody to return … but if these people come back, their rights will be much better protected,” Kadyrov said in a statement published last week on his government’s web site.

Kadyrov has regularly been accused of grave human rights violations, including kidnapping and murder — charges that he denies.

Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski reacted Friday by questioning Kadyrov’s logic. “If there was democracy in Chechnya, I suppose that there would not be as many Chechen refugees as there are, including in Poland,” he said in remarks e-mailed by his ministry to The Moscow Times.

The protest began when asylum seekers boarded a train on Tuesday and said they wanted to protest at the Strasbourg, France-based European Court of Human Rights about their treatment in Poland and the slow process of getting political asylum.

But the group of about 170 people, comprised of natives of Chechnya, Ingushetia and Georgia, got no further than the German border because they lacked tickets and proper documentation, Polish and German media reported.

The refugees were brought to Debak, a camp near Warsaw, the United Nations refugee agency said Friday.

One of the organizers, 30-year-old Ingush refugee Zhanetta Baisurkayeva, said the protest was motivated by a wave of violence against asylum seekers from the Caucasus since the fall.

“It started with numerous beatings of our people by young people. Then they started to assault refugee stations. … Strasbourg was the last attempt to call for attention and for real help,” she said in an interview published on the Waynakh.com web site.

Baisurkayeva added that she feared extradition to Russia as punishment for her involvement.

Polish ombudsman Janusz Kochanowski promised that living conditions at the Radom camp would be checked, the Thenews.pl web site reported Sunday.

The United Nations refugee agency disputed the notion that conditions in Polish camps justified the protest.

Melita Sunjic, a spokeswoman for the agency’s office in Budapest, Hungary, which covers Poland, said that according to her monitoring reports, conditions have greatly improved recently.

“The situation is no worse for Chechens than for anybody else,” Sunjic told The St. Petersburg Times.

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