Information Centre of Finno-Ugric
Peoples: press release, 7 July 2005
The Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation supporting the Mari
people in Russia
08.07.05
The
Resolution in Support of the Mari People was adopted at the 7th General Assembly of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO)
held in The Hague, the Netherlands, 24-26 June 2005. It calls upon the
Russian Federation to cease their harassment and persecution of the Mari
people, to re-institute the Mari language use in all levels of education and
all forms of media, to abolish censorship practice and to start punishing
those who commit crimes against indigenous people.
The UNPO also supported the international Appeal on Behalf of the Mari
People initiated this February by a number of scientists, writers,
composers
and politicians. By now, the Appeal has been signed by over 10000 people
from more than seventy countries and by a number of international
organisations, including the UNPO. Everyone can read and sign the Appeal
on
the Internet page http://www.ugri.info/mari/.
The UNPO unites over fifty peoples who are not represented in the United
Nations (see www.unpo.org). Its Finno-Ugric members are Ingrian Finns,
Komis, Maris, Udmurts, and the Hungarian minority in Romania; the Estonians
had been its members as well until the restoration of independence.
The last
meeting of Finno-Ugrians under the aegis of UNPO was at the conference
"Peoples' Rights: the Ideals and the Reality" after the 4th World Congress
of Finno-Ugric Peoples held in August 2004 in Tallinn, Estonia (see:
www.kongress.ugri.info).
***
The 7th General Assembly of UNPO passed twelve resolutions on the situation
of its member peoples. Of the Finno-Ugric peoples, resolutions were
taken on
the Maris and on the Hungarian minority in Romania. This is not an
accident,
considering the serious violations of peoples' and ethnic minorities'
rights
taking place in these regions.
The Resolution in Support of the Mari People says that, during the recent
years, things have changed for the worse for the Maris. Indeed, the
Republic
of Mari El is economically among the most backward regions of the Russian
Federation, with over half of its population living under the subsistence
level. The Resolution says that the Maris have lost political power
in their
own republic. This is true as well, since there are only two ethnic
Maris
among the ministers of the local government. Those who disagree with
the
local president's policy are dismissed and persecuted at the level
of
republican, regional and local administrations.
The resolution points that, as the result of underrepresentedness of
Maris
in the local and regional administration, the Mari people have lost
the
ability to protect and assure their language and culture. The number
of
students learning the Mari language has sharply decreased. This is
confirmed
by the following figures. In the 2000-2001 academic year, according
to the
Ministry of Education of the Republic of Mari El, the Mari language
was
studied either as the native language or as the state language by 72
533
schoolchildren (60,3 per cent of the total). In the 2004-2005 year
this
number has dropped, according to the Ministry of Education of the Russian
Federation, to 52 847 (that is, 44,4 per cent). This year, twelve schools
will be closed and 37 schools will be reorganised with the loss of
the Mari
language instruction.
On the republic's television network, programmes in Mari are limited
to
three hours per week only. On the Mari Republic's radio station, only
two
out of eleven hours of its weekly broadcasting are conducted in Mari.
One
must remember that nearly half of the population of the republic are
ethnically Mari. In the Mari Republic Book Publishing House, only 5
to 8
books are printed in the Mari language per year with the money from
the
Republic's budget.
The resolution also notes the increased censorship of the media and
grave
infringements of the Mari People's freedom of speech. This is confirmed
by
the fact that at least 15 newspapers of Mari El are now printed outside
the
republic. Censorship has reached even the Internet. Since 9 June 2005,
web
users in the Republic of Mari El can no more access the site of the
agency
MariUver (www.mari.ee) and the opposition
site Vlasti.net. Both sites are
critical to the administration of Mari El.
Pointing at the concern expressed by the European Commission and the
European Parliament in connection with breach of human rights and democracy
in the Republic of Mari El, the General Assembly of UNPO in its resolution
calls upon the Russian Federation to cease their harassment and persecution
of the Mari people and the degradation of their language and culture,
and
proposed to allow and support a monitoring process to take place in
the Mari
Republic, Udmurt Republic, Komi Republic and other Finno-Ugric regions
to
access the ongoing situation and take positive measures for its improvement.
We shall see now whether or not will the Russian Federation listen
to the
opinion of the international community concerning its harsh nationalities
policy.
Information Centre of Finno-Ugric Peoples (SURI)
Tallinn, Estonia suri@suri.ee
phone +372 6449 270 fax +372 6445 119
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