August 20, 2005
Russia: Marii El Begins To Look Like Belarus On The Volga
by Liz Fuller
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The fears of many foreign scholars that the Tenth Finno-Ugric Congress that took place this week in the capital of the Republic of Marii El would be hijacked by the republican government following the untimely death in July of its president have proved well-founded. According the Tallin-based Information Centre of Finno-Ugric Peoples and a U.S. scholar who attended the congress, the republican authorities went to extraordinary lengths to prevent any contact between foreign delegates and members of the Mari national movement Mari Ushem. At the same time, Marii El President Leonid Markelov assured congress participants in Yoshkar-Ola of his commitment to democratization and equal rights for the Mari minority, and he dismissed unfavorable commentary as "unfounded attacks by the Finnish and Estonian press." (For brief background on this minority group, see
"Who are the Maris?".)
The official webpage of the government of the Republic of Mari El (http://www.gov.mari.ru) does not currently provide statistics on the ethnic composition of the population, or on the number of publications available in Mari, or on the percentage of the republic's schools where teaching is conducted in the Mari language. But Tunne Kelam, an Estonian deputy to the European Parliament, told RFE/RL earlier this summer that education in Mari is provided in some elementary schools but not at a higher level, and that consequently only some 20 percent of Mari children in Mari El are taught in their native language.
That lack of educational opportunities was just one of the shortcomings enumerated in a nonbinding resolution passed by the European Parliament on 12 May, which criticized the Russian government for tolerating abuses of human and minority rights in Mari El, including the killing of opposition journalists and politicians (see "RFE/RL Political Weekly," 24 May 2005). Hungarian Europarliamentarian Gyula Hegyi told fellow lawmakers in the course of the debate on that resolution that discrimination against the Mari is so intense that their survival as a separate ethnic group is in jeopardy.
Crackdown Intensifies
Europarliamentarians noted that the ongoing crackdown on the Maris intensified after Markelov was reelected as the republic's president last fall. They said he sacked scores of Mari-speaking local officials and schoolteachers in districts of the republic who had voted against him. Those reprisals prompted scholars and prominent political figures in Estonia, Finland, and Hungary to launch an international Appeal on Behalf of the Mari People in February of this year (http://www.ugri.info/mari).