Estonia, Russia Clash on the Future of Finno-Ugric Peoples
04.07.08
Vienna,
June 30 – Estonian and Russian officials clashed over the weekend
about the fate of the numerically small but politically sensitive Finno-Ugric
nations in the Russian Federation, an exchange “Gazeta” said was the
first “international scandal” in Dmitry Medvedev’s presidency and
one that points to more problems ahead for these officials and their peoples.
In the course of the World Finno-Ugric Congress, Medvedev met with the
presidents of Estonia, Finland and Hungary, the three independent Finno-Ugric
states. His meetings with the leaders of Finland and Hungary reportedly
went well, but his session with Estonia’s president Toomas Hendrik
Ilves clearly did not.
Medvedev suggested that the two discuss “the remarkable number of
problems” in the relations between Russia and Estonia, to which Ilves
responded, speaking English rather than Estonian, that it would be a good
thing if “the public rhetoric” surrounding their bilateral ties were
to be dialed back (www.gazeta.ru/politics/2008/06/30_a_2770031.shtml).
But while the conversation between Medvedev and Ilves may have been
somewhat tense, the problems really began with the remarks Ilves made after
that session and with speeches delivered by others to the plenary sessions
of the congress as well as with the comments officials and scholars offered
about both sets of remarks.
In his speech, Ilves noted that only three of the 24 Finno-Ugric peoples
had achieved independent statehood, something he implied that others should
hope for even if the current prospects seem bleak: “Freedom and democracy
were our choice 150 years ago when even poets did not yet dream about state
independence,” he said. “As soon as you get a taste of freedom,” the Estonian leader continued,
“you will understand that this is a question of survival, without which
it is impossible to operate.”
Not surprisingly, given the less than warm relations between Moscow
and Tallinn – more than one Russian commentator today noted that when
there are general problems in a relationship, almost anything can be the
occasion for a conflict – many of the delegates from the Russian Federation
responded very negatively to the Estonian president’s statement.
Representatives of the Khanty-Mansiisk Autonomous District, for example,
told Russian journalists in widely quoted remarks that they were surprised
by Ilves’ remarks and that they could not imagine how they would cope
“without Russia.”
But the strongest attack against Ilves came from Konstantin Kosachev,
the chairman of the international affairs committee of the Duma and a frequent
critic of the policies of the Baltic countries. “I consider,” he told
journalists, that an attempt has again been made to politicize the Finno-Ugric
process,” an action that he said was “extremely incorrect” at such
a conclave.
He said that albeit “in a much camouflaged form,” Ilves had issued
“certain appeals to the Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia to think about
their own self-determination,” appeals that had left him angry and disappointed
because he suggested it showed that “Estonia in the person of its president
cannot see the forest for the trees.”
Then, when he delivered his speech to the congress, Kosachev expanded
on these remarks. “One should not resolve problems by trying to sharpen
ethnic conflicts,” he insisted, especially in the Russian Federation
where “we have no problems with the survival and good neighborly relations
of people of the most varied nationalities.”
In response to those words, the Estonian delegation including President
Ilves stood up and left the hall. The audience applauded, according to
Kosachev because they did not approve what the Estonians were doing but
far more likely because so many of them, who have been and remain victims
of Moscow’s policies, did.
Estonian officials were unanimous in saying that the Estonian delegation
had done the right thing, standing up for their fellow Finno-Ugric nations
and refusing to sit still for what they and Finnish President Tarja
Halonen said was Kosachev’s tendentious account of the state of Finno-Ugric
life in Russia (www.rus.delfi.ee/daily/politics/article.php?id=19244083&l=fplink).
But Russians were outraged. “Nezavisimaya gazeta” today offered
the observations of three Moscow commentators. Valery Tishkov, the
director of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, dismissed the
very idea of any “commonality of a Finno-Ugric world” – “at least
from the political point of view (www.ng.ru/politics/2008-06-30/1_skandal.html). It is “one thing” in Hungary, Finland and Estonia, “where these
peoples are the titular” nationalities. “It is an entirely different
thing in Russia where they are minorities” and where they are “not
in such a catastrophic situation as some want to suggest.” Consequently,
urging them to seek their own state is “a cover form of separatism.” Tishkov who has often reacted angrily in the past to concern in Europe
and more generally about the fate of the Finno-Ugric peoples of Russia,
insisted that the government in Tallinn “would not permit a Russian or
small Finno-Ugric minority in Estonia to define itself in this way.”
Konstantin Voronov, a senior researcher at the Institute of World
Economy and International Relations (IMEMO) in Moscow, was equally dismissive,
saying that the Finno-Ugric issue was a “’sleeping’ problem, which
“our Estonian partners want to politicize,” despite Moscow’s willingness
to allow minorities autonomy as in Tatarstan and Chechnya.
And Dmitry Suslov, a researcher at the Council for Foreign and
Defense Policy, summed up what Medvedev, Kosachev and all the others on
the Russian side almost certainly feel. “This scandal cannot radically
affect Russian-Estonian relations because today they are not in the best
condition” given, among other things, last year’s dispute over the
Bronze Soldier.
UPDATE for July 1: Russian efforts to change the rules under
which the International Consultation Committee of Finno-Ugric Peoples operates
between congresses failed, when the congress itself voted down a Medvedev-backed
plan to shift the headquarters of that committee from Helsinki to the Russian
Federation. Backers of the plan included the delegations from Mordovia
and Mari El, whose members, one Finno-Ugric site, said are officers in
the Russian special services (www.ingria.info/?lenta&news_action=show_news&news_id=4088).
Paul Goble
Source: Window
on Eurasia
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