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USIS Washington File

14 January 2000

Text: Helsinki Commission Criticizes Russian Policy in Chechnya

(Calls detention of Chechen males "inhumane and shortsighted") (580)
The Chairman of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
(CSCE) -- also known as the Helsinki Commission -- condemned the
announcement by the Russian military that it would keep in custody all
Chechen males, ages 10 to 60 years old, to check their alleged
associations with guerrilla groups.
In a January 13 press release, Representative Christopher H. Smith
warned: "This inhumane and shortsighted response promises to fuel the
mistrust Chechens have towards Moscow and may well contribute to
hardening further the resolve of the Chechen population."
He urged the Russian Government to countermand the Russian military's
decision and to "enter into good-faith negotiations with the
legitimate political representatives of the region before it's too
late."
The CSCE, better known as the Helsinki Commission, is an independent
agency of the U.S. Government mandated to monitor and encourage
compliance of the participating States with the Helsinki Final Act. It
is composed of nine members each from the Senate and House of
Representatives, as well as one member each from the Departments of
State, Defense, and Commerce.
Following is the text of the release:
(begin text)
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
Washington, D.C. 
January 13, 2000
Rep. Christopher H. Smith, Chairman (Republican, New Jersey)
Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Co-Chairman (Republican, Colorado)
CSCE NEWS RELEASE
CHAIRMAN SLAMS RUSSIAN POLICY IN CHECHNYA AS "HIPPOCRATIC OATH IN
REVERSE"
Washington, D.C. -- The Chairman of the Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-NJ), today
condemned the announcement by the Russian military that it would keep
in custody all Chechen males, ages 10 to 60 years old, to check their
alleged associations with guerrilla groups. Russian guards have sealed
off the border between Chechnya and Ingushetia and are preventing men
and boys from joining their families in returning to their homes.
"This policy is simply inhumane and underscores the brutal strategy
that Russia has followed toward the non-combatant population all
along," said Chairman Smith. "This inhumane and shortsighted response
promises to fuel the mistrust Chechens have towards Moscow and may
well contribute to hardening further the resolve of the Chechen
population. I urge Moscow to countermand this decision, heed the
advice of the international community, and enter into good-faith
negotiations with the legitimate political representatives of the
region before it's too late."
The second Chechen war of the decade has created more than 200,000
internally displaced persons who have fled from northern Chechnya
primarily to the region of Ingushetia west of Chechnya. The Ingushetia
government has criticized this latest policy of detaining Chechen
males. Smith continued, "We know even from the scant reporting on the
situation that the Russian military has inflicted major abuses against
the civilian population in Chechnya. The Russian Government seems to
have instituted the reverse of the Hippocratic Oath: 'Do all the harm
you can.'"
On November 16 of last year the House of Representatives passed a
resolution expressing concern for the situation in Chechnya and urging
all sides to negotiate. Two weeks earlier, on November 3, the
Commission held a hearing during which a panel of experts testified on
the growing threat to the civilian population of Chechnya. At the
Istanbul Summit of the OSCE, Russia tentatively opened the door for
OSCE involvement in resolving the conflict.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State)



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