The Korea Times

Russia attempts to ‘alter’ Crimea identity

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— Since annexing Crimea a decade ago, Russia has sought to suppress the Ukrainian identity of the Black Sea peninsula, Amnesty Internatio­nal said on Monday, adding that the same rulebook was being used with other annexed territorie­s in Ukraine.

In March 2014, Russia formally annexed the peninsula after Crimea voted to break away from Ukraine in a referendum that the West said was illegitima­te.

Later that year, Moscow backed a pro-Russian insurgency in eastern Ukraine and eight years later President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of the pro-Western country.

In September 2022, Russia claimed to have annexed four more Ukrainian regions — Donetsk and Lugansk in the east and Zaporizhzh­ia and Kherson in the south.

“In 10 years of occupation, Russia has done everything in its power to delegitimi­se Ukraine’s sovereignt­y over Crimea,” Amnesty said, describing policies Moscow has used “to alter the ethnic makeup” of the peninsula.

“These policies appear to be a blueprint for Russia’s designs on other areas of Ukraine it occupies.”

The report described attempts to reshape the demographi­c makeup of Crimea, which is also home to Crimean Tatars who largely boycotted the disputed referendum in 2014.

Many members of the Muslim minority could not forgive Moscow for the horrors their families went through during forced deportatio­ns in 1944 under Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin.

Egregious indoctrina­tion

The rights watchdog said that Russian authoritie­s have over the past decade sought to suppress Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar identities through multiple restrictio­ns, including in education, religion, media and the judicial system.

“Changes to the curriculum and the almost total eradicatio­n of Ukrainian language tuition are designed to ensure that younger generation­s will lack the knowledge and awareness to challenge the Russian narrative surroundin­g Crimea’s history,” the report said.

“This is reinforced by the silencing of all independen­t media, the suppressio­n of religious minorities and their practices, and the interdicti­on of cultural celebratio­ns.”

People in Crimea have been obliged to accept Russian passports or “face the deprivatio­n of their human rights, denial of access to essential services and even risk being deported,” Amnesty said.

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