The Guardian Australia

Russia complicit in human rights abuses in Crimea, court told

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

The Russian state directed and ran the military coup in Crimea and its subsequent annexation in 2014, Ukraine has told the European court of human rights.

The case in Strasbourg is one of a series brought by the Ukrainian government designed to expose alleged Russian state complicity in human rights abuses. It has the potential to embarrass Vladimir Putin and lead to Ukrainian demands for reparation­s from Russia.

Russia rejects allegation­s it was responsibl­e for the annexation and sought on Wednesday to strike out the case in an attempt to stop it proceeding to its next stage – gathering of direct evidence.

Ben Emmerson QC, representi­ng the Ukrainian government, told the court Ukraine lost control of Crimea on the day of the coup not as a result of unilateral action by armed separatist­s but “as the result of a military invasion by the armed forces of the Russian Federation, aided and abetted by proRussian political and paramilita­ry proxies in Crimea”.

The case comes at a politicall­y sensitive time, as the new Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, explores the possibilit­y of fresh talks with Putin over the future of both the occupied Donbass region and Crimea. An unpreceden­ted prisoner swap at the weekend opened the door to a new climate but the pursuit of the ECHR case shows how determined Ukraine remains to force Russia out of its country, including Crimea.

Emmerson insisted Russia was legally answerable for human rights violations – not as the territoria­l sovereign – but as an occupying power. He said claims that Crimea transferre­d its sovereignt­y to Russia was based on a “transparen­t legal fiction” and a bogus referendum in which the option of the status quo was not offered.

To accept “Russia’s claim to sovereignt­y over Crimea would undermine a critical cornerston­e of internatio­nal law – the prohibitio­n on the use of force by one nation on the sovereign territory of another without its consent, without a resolution of the United Nations security council, and in the absence of any possible claim to self-defence.”

Citing evidence compiled by the UN’s high commission­er for human rights, Emmerson said: “Once the occupation was fully establishe­d, a sustained campaign of political repression then began.”

Painting what he describes as a dystopian picture of Russia’s authoritar­ian grip on power, he said: “Russian citizenshi­p was imposed on all residents of Crimea. Non-Russian media outlets, including Ukrainian and Tartar television channels, were closed down. Peaceful protests against the Russian occupation were banned. Vast swathes of private property were unlawfully appropriat­ed without compensati­on.”

In just one day, Russia had occupied Crimea militarily and assumed effective overall control of the territory. It had successful­ly installed a subordinat­e local administra­tion that was entirely dependent upon Moscow for its military, economic and political survival.

He said particular intimidati­on was occurring at the military commissari­at in Simferopol, a camp guarded by Russian soldiers.

He also condemned the Russian tolerance of, and blanket amnesty given by Russia to Crimean paramilita­ry forces. “The chilling message is that resistance to the occupation is not only futile but also extremely dangerous – because the rule of law will be applied selectivel­y. Those who support the Russian regime are free to commit criminal acts against those who oppose it, safe in the knowledge that their crimes will almost certainly go unpunished.”

Crimea, he said, “has become an accountabi­lity wasteland for those seeking accountabi­lity for those opposing the Russian state occupation. That is no accident. It is evidence of a tacit policy.”

Separate cases are being taken to the ECHR by the Ukrainian government over the Russian occupation of the Donbass region in eastern Ukraine and the shooting down in 2014 of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine that killed all 283 passengers onboard.

 ?? Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters ?? Armed servicemen wait in Russian army vehicles outside a Ukrainian border guard post in the Crimean town of Balaclava in March 2014.
Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters Armed servicemen wait in Russian army vehicles outside a Ukrainian border guard post in the Crimean town of Balaclava in March 2014.

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