Tjebbe van Tijen on Mon, 8 Nov 1999 18:17:58 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Chechnya |
Dear Josephine Berry my guess is that your question is meant as an opinion on the selective nature of protest, also in circles like the nettime forum.. This should not come as a surprise. Several reasons could be imagined: -an Islamic new nation can not easily count on support from 'western world people'; -doubts about what this new republic with its strange mix of possible bandits and anti-communists represents; -a general lack of a critical attitude towards the inheritors of the former state-communist power system among 'western' people with left-wing sympathies, which relates to a tradition of acceptance of imperialism by 'anti-imperialists' (however contradictory this may sound) when performed by the communist heirs of the empires of the Russian Czars and the Chinese emperors, because this form of empire building and maintaining was supposedly done as a part of the utopic plan to free all human kind, this in contrast to American imperialism, which is still predominantly explained as keeping human kind in the shackles of the capitalist system; -Western 'progressives' and 'radicals' and even Western peace movement, have not been able to escape from their fixed role in the cold war split of the world in two oversimplified camps (capitalist and socialist), they would tend to be very critical of their 'own' power structure, and have second thoughts before protesting activities by states from the so called socialist camp, Afghanistan seemed to be much more remote than Vietnam; -ten years after the alleged fall of the communist system, this attitude seems to live on; -there seems to be a close link between power politics as expressed by leaders of the Western world and protest movements... the last ones tend to follow and to illustrated the issues that have been posed by the Western political leadership.. It does not matter what their attitudes are.. pro or contra involvement of Western powers, the choice of issues is made primarily by the actors on the world stage, rather than by activist groups; -to my knowledge there is no network (yet) between Chechnian partisans and Western activist groups. When I compare the Russian army attacks on the split-off republic of Chechnya from 94 up to now and try to come up with some figures, than the issue gets even more wry... I happen to do research on all aerial bombings on civilian targets in this century and have been working recently in updating my data on Chechnya.. There are sources that report 20.000/30.000 civilian death in Grozny during the aerial bombardment in 1995/1996 (this is supposedly a number published by the Russian Memorial group... I am still waiting for a reply on my message to friend on Moscow check this number) http://users.evitech.fi/~giorgig/ich_rap7.html has this note 63. The only organization that has made a systematic study of the civilian losses during the battle for Grozny is Memorial. They claim that from 25 December till 25 January, in Grozny alone, at least 25,000 people have perished by bombing and shelling. --------- Now compare with NATO bombing in the Kosovo conflict this year which to my knowledge could have made between 500 a thousand civilian death.. --------- In 1996 by Amnesty International has a number of 20/30.00 civilian death in the Chechnian conflict. http://www.amnesty.it/ailib/aipub/1996/EUR/44602096.htm The Chechen republic has an English language website, you might now, otherwise it is http://www.amina.com/amina/ It does carry some images of the destruction of the town of Grozny, but there are not concrete details on casualties... or an inventory of the damage.. I found some recent book titles on the issue, but I have not been able yet to get hold of them, nevertheless I give the references from my Unbombing database http://www.igc.apc.org/hrw/pubweb/Webcat-83.htm Three Months of War in Chechnya This report is the third in a series on the conflict in Chechnya. As the war in the break away republic enters its third month, Russian forces continue to commit gross abuses against the civilian population. In the early weeks of the war, Russian bombs and artillery fire laid waste to Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, and outlying villages, destroying apartment buildings, hospitals, and other civilian objects - killing, maiming, or injuring thousands of civilians. (D706) 2/95, 26 pp., $5.00/£2.95 Order online WAR IN CHECHNYA New Report from the Field This is the second in a series of reports documenting violations of human rights and humanitarian law by all forces in the war in Chechnya. Conducting fact-finding missions in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, and in Ingushetiya, interviewing refugees who fled from Grozny and the surrounding regions, our researchers describe in the victims' own words the indiscriminate bombing and shelling of Chechnya that has inflicted devastating suffering on civilians. (D702) 1/95, 14 pp., $3.00/£1.95 Order online RUSSIA'S WAR IN CHECHNYA Victims Speak Out The first in a series of reports that document violations of humanitarian law by all sides in the war in Chechnya, it describes how Russian forces have shown utter contempt for civilian lives in the break away republic of Chechnya. Eyewitness testimony described Russian bombs, shells or mortar fire levelling apartment buildings, entire neighborhoods, and single-family homes in Grozny and hitting civilian areas in outlying villages in Chechnya and in neighboring Ingushetiya. Russian forces also destroyed at least two hospitals and part of a third, an orphanage, and several markets. They have inflicted hundreds of civilian deaths, gruesome casualties, and caused an estimated 350,000 people to flee. (D701) 1/95, 8 pp., $3.00/£1.95 Well This is still very haphazard... but I thought I better react to your statement quickly... I am of course interested to see what can be done to apply some butterfly effect on public opinion in this matter Nice greetings Tjebbe van Tijen Imaginary Museum Projects (IMP), Amsterdam Background information on: http://www.iisg.nl/~tvt/index.html # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net