http://www.rferl.org/content/Tatarstan_Nationalist_Leader_Encouraged_By_Court_Ruling_On_Kosovo/2109747.html

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
July 26, 2010

Tatarstan Nationalist Leader Encouraged By Court Ruling On Kosovo 

KAZAN, Tatarstan: There have been mixed reactions in the Russian republic of 
Tatarstan to the International Court of Justice's (ICJ) ruling that Kosovo's 
2008 declaration of independence from Serbia did not violate international law, 
RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service reports.

There has been no official comment by officials in Tatarstan about the court's 
ruling on July 22.

But the decision was welcomed by Fauzia Bayramova, the chairwoman of the Milli 
Medjlis, a self-proclaimed pan-Tatar national assembly. She said on July 23 
that she hopes Tatarstan can follow the same path as Kosovo and declare its 
independence.

"The [ICJ] decision on Kosovo gives us [Tatar independence activists] hope and 
the chance that in the future Tatarstan and other nations of [Russia's] Volga 
region can become independent," Bayramova told RFE/RL. "But the leadership of 
Tatarstan has never appealed to the international community asking for 
recognition of Tatarstan's sovereignty [and] I don't believe they would do it 
now."

In 2008, the Milli Medjlis sent out a proclamation on Tatarstan independence to 
the United Nations and more than 30 other countries. The appeal was later 
published on several websites and received a lot of publicity.

It came just a few months after Russia had recognized the independence of the 
breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Russian authorities said the Milli Medjlis appeal was an attempt to violate 
Russia's territorial integrity and that it provoked interethnic hatred.

In February, Bayramova was found guilty of fomenting interethnic hatred via the 
media and given a one-year suspended sentence. 

But Midkhat Farukshin, a professor of political science at Kazan State 
University, said the UN court decision will make no impact on political life in 
Tatarstan.

"Tatarstan and Kosovo are in different situations," he told RFE/RL. "You can't 
compare them to each other. The status of Kosovo can be compared to Abkhazia or 
South Ossetia, but never to the republics in the Russian Federation. There is 
no separatism [in Russia]."

Tatarstan is about 800 kilometers east of Moscow. It has a population of some 
3.8 million that includes a large ethnic Russian minority. 



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