http://www.russiatoday.ru/news/news/26286

 Poland threatened by 'Kosovo scenario' *The Silesian Autonomy Movement has
sent a petition to Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk asking him to allow all
regional communities to gain autonomy status.*

If he does not agree, the Silesians say they are ready to raise the issue of
separation, according to Russian newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

The movement officially declares its support for the autonomy of Silesia.
The association was founded in 1991 and is based mainly in the Polish part
of Upper Silesia.

A similar petition has been sent to the Polish Sejm, the lower house of
parliament, which along with the Senate (the upper house) has adopted the
Act on National and Ethnic Minorities and on Regional Language in the
country. The Silesians and the Silesian language have not been mentioned
among other nationalities and ethnical minorities.

In the 2002 national census, over 170, 000 Poles described their nationality
as 'Silesian'. One third of them use the Silesian language at home. The
language has been entered into the list of languages at the US Library of
Congress.

Silesians have appealed to the Strasbourg Court of Human Rights after the
Polish district court in Katovitsy ruled that the Silesian nation does not
exist, and did not let the Silesian Union to be registered.

According to experts, a deliberate decision to ignore the Silesians'
interests could provoke the 'Kosovo scenario'.

The problem has a long history. Silesia is a historical region of Central
Europe located in modern day Poland, the Czech Republic and Germany.  Modern
Silesia is inhabited by Poles, Germans, Czechs and Slavic Silesians. The
last Polish census of 2002 showed that the Silesians are the largest
national minority in Poland, Germans being the second. Both groups are
located mostly in Upper Silesia. The Czech part of Silesia is inhabited by
Czechs, Moravians and Poles.

In 1920-1939 Silesia had its own Sejm, the governing body in control of the
budget. It was elected in democratic elections and had certain influence
over the usage of taxes collected in Silesia.

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