Oct 17, 2017

Crimean Tatar: Mass Detention Following One-Person Protests Across Crimea.


Photo Courtesy of Crimean Solidarity Public Association

On 14 October 2017 up to 49 people were detained following one-person protests staged against the ongoing suppression of Crimean Tatars. Olha Skripnik, head of Crimean Human Rights Group, states that these detentions violate the right of expression and freedom of speech. Human Rights groups and Western governments continue to denounce the on-going campaign of suppression that the indigenous Turkic community face. 

Below is an article published by RFERL

Dozens of people have been detained in the Russia-occupied Ukrainian region of Crimea for demonstrating in defense of Crimean Tatars.

Lawyer Emil Kurbedinov said on October 14 that more than 100 people had staged one-person protests across Crimea earlier in the day and that at least 34 had been detained, even though one-person protests do not require advance permission from officials.

The Russian authorities in Crimea reported that 49 people had been detained, according to the Russian website Meduza. The Russian police statement said all the detainees had been released after "precautionary conversations."

The protesters held signs with slogans including "Stop the arrests, searches, and robbery of Muslims" and "Muslims are not terrorists."

"The detentions violated the right of peaceful assembly and the right to freedom of speech and the free expression of opinion," Olha Skripnik, head of the Crimean Human Rights Group, told RFE/RL. "This was a peaceful action that did not present any danger.... One-person pickets -- which these people have been forced to adopt -- are not restricted even by the Russian laws that are de facto operating in Crimea."

On October 11, six Crimean Tatars were arrested in the city of Bakhchisarai and accused of membership in Hizb ut-Tahir, an Islamic organization that is legal in Ukraine, but banned by Russian authorities.

The Crimean Solidarity rights group said that several other Crimean Tatars were detained while protesting against those arrests.

Rights groups and Western governments have denounced what they call a persistent campaign of oppression targeting members of the indigenous, Turkic-speaking Crimean Tatar minority and other citizens who opposed Moscow's annexation.

The majority of Crimean Tatars opposed Russia's 2014 annexation of their historic homeland.