Surrender to Victory
Amending the Council of Europe’s (CoE) sanctioning rules to restore Russia’s voting rights in its Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) has divided democracy and human rights advocates. In spite of criticism for the 2014 annexation of Crimea and Kremlin’s human rights’ record, influential groups such as the EU-Russia Civil Society Forum have backed Russia’s return as a “last hope for Russian citizens seeking justice for human rights violations”. They call for new rules to enable the organisation suspend or expel members who fail to comply with its principles.
At its summer session on June 24 – 28, 2019, the PACE passed a resolution which restored the credentials of the Russian delegation. Proposals by Ukraine to impose further limitations on Russian participation were rejected. PACE also passed tough recommendations that Russia should implement, including: releasing of 24 detained Ukrainian sailors; and immediate payment of all financial contributions to the CoE. PACE also requested Russia’s full co-operation with the investigations of the shooting down of Malaysian Airlines’ flight MH17 and the murder of Boris Nemtsov, and urged vigorous measures to prevent violations of the human rights of lesbians, gays, bisexual, transgender and intersex people, especially in Chechnya.
Dimplomacy or defeat?
Critics, such as the US special representative on Ukraine Kurt Volker saw the decision as abandoning the CoE’s own principles. Russia had been suspended from the voting rights in the PACE since April 2014 because of annexing the Crimea. Back then most CoE members called the actions of Russia’s military forces in the Crimea a “persistent failure to honour its obligations and commitments” in a strong resolution. In response Moscow ceased its membership dues, leaving a €53million-large hole in the CoE’s 2018 budget.
According to the former president of PACE Anne Brasseur, sanctions against the Russian delegation were taken after the annexation of Crimea, because it was “a clear violation of international law and that’s unacceptable”. But the CoE never excluded Russia formally. “[PACE] suspended their voting rights and then (…) [the Russian delegation] decided by themselves to leave, and even not to submit credentials later on. It was their own decision”, Brasseur explained for BlueLink Stories in a video interview at the General Assembley of the EU-Russia Civil Society Forum in May.
PACE’s move was condemned strongly by Ukraine. “This is not diplomacy, this is a surrender,” the country’s envoy to the CoE Dmytro Kuleba commented for The Guardian. According to his tweet on the same occasion five other countries opposed the decision, so the fight to keep Russia out of the Parliamentary Assembly is not over.
Concessions for Russia create concerns within the EU, as they may encourage other governments to cut corners around human and democratic provisions for their citizens. International organisations such as CoE and OSCE are facing challenges from the interpretation of what they were made for and what the commitment that their (member) states have agreed to actually means to today’s world, warned Aleska Simkic, Deputy Head of EU’s Delegation to Russia.
ON VIDEO Aleska Simkic, Deputy Head of EU’s Delegation to Russia interview at the General Assembly of the EU-Russia Civil Society Forum in May 2019.
Recent supression of independent candidates for the Moscow City Council elections sends clear signal that the Kremlin has no intention of complying with CoE’s principles. But having Russia expelled from the CoE is the last thing rights and democracy activists in the country want. On the contrary, they need the international body as a last resource of international pressure against the Kremlin. In response to recently documented electoral rights violations by authorities in Moscow and St. Petersburg, 40 civil society organizations and activists appealed to the CoE to discuss the situation and include information about it in its forthcoming assessment of Russia’s implementation of the European Charter of Local Self-Government.
An opportunity to defend human rights
Earlier a CoE-Russia contact group of human rights advocates and the Board of the EU-Russia Civil Society Forum appealed to all PACE members return voting rights to Russian delegation. In a joint position they called it “a logical final step” in the process of looking for a solution to the CoE-Russia crisis.
According to the civil society rights advocates, the resolution should not be seen as a threat to the future of CoE, but rather – as an opportunity to secure it. Its proposed amendments to the PACE Rules of Procedure do not eliminate, but only limit, the existing sanction mechanisms, they claim. Eliminating the opportunity to limit voting rights in the PACE, other member’s rights can be still suspended or withdrawn, ex. the right to table a motion for resolution or recommendation, to address questions to the Committee of Ministers, to be appointed rapporteur, to request an urgent or current affairs debate, to be candidate for elected posts within the Assembly, to be a member of election observation missions, to represent the Assembly in other Council of Europe bodies or at external events.
The human rights activists feared that not adopting any decision on the matter would most probably have led to Russia’s departure from the Council of Europe – with all the negative consequences this would cause for the Russian public and the CoE as a whole. “We are convinced that Russia’s departure from the CoE would not stop human rights violations and halt the authoritarian backslide in the country, or prevent Russian government’s aggressive behaviour in the international arena”, their statement said.
PACE’s June decision was formally justified as a mean to enable Russia’s participation in the elections of next Secretary General. The Kremlin had called this a “crucial factor” for remaining a remember of the CoE.
Russia’s prolonged membership is beneficial for the country’s citizens who actively use the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) – one of the CoE’s most effective mechanisms for human rights protection. In 2018 Russian nationals filed 11777 applications to the ECHR, which is 20% of total number. According to a report of Moscow-based human rights group Public Verdict, in 20 years of membership the ECHR’s judges took 2013 decisions regarding Russia, imposing a total of 1.9 billion Euros in compensations. This suggests that remaining in the CoE is not exactly a victory for the Kremlin but rather a trade off.
Instead of arguing about the symbolic importance of preserving the sanctions against Russia in the PACE and mobilising significant efforts for this, those who really care about compelling the Russian authorities to observe international law should rather focus on finding other, more effective ways and tools for ensuring that, the Initiative Group of Russian human rights defenders and the Board of the EU-Russia Civil Society Forum believe.
The organisations stated that the continued membership of Russia in the CoE “should be actively used by all concerned parties as an opportunity to build up stronger pressure on Russia to ensure implementation of its obligations”. The organizations propose development of new and more intense mechanisms to intervene with respect of Russia’s violations of international law, that should be applied in the Council of Europe, in particular with respect to Crimea and Donbas.
The withdrawal or lack of enthusiasm by Russia and some other member states for the values of human rights worries old-school European politicians such as Anne Brasseur as well. “It is not about the country, it’s about the protection of the citizens of those 47 member states where every citizen must have the guarantee to have the fundamental freedoms: to have freedom of expression; freedom of the media; freedom of association. And the CoE is really the organization which guarantees those fundamental freedoms,” Brasseur commented.
ON VIDEO Anne Brasseur, former President of PACE; CoE guarantees fundamental freedoms; we have to continue to cooperate in order to preserve them.
In response to the concerns over weakening of CoE’s sanctioning rules, the human rights’ defenders call for a critical review and upgrade of the CoE’s toolbox to address grave and systemic violations of the organisation’s norms by member states. Following upon to the Committee of Ministers’ proposal to develop a new procedure for a coordinated response to such situations, would be much better and stronger than the existing symbolic sanctions within PACE, they pointed out. Such procedure should include a possibility for suspension or expulsion of a member state.
Developing such lines of action would demonstrate that the PACE has not just resorted to a short-term tactical solution to the crisis but is working on a longer-term strategy of responding to violations committed by Russia, and, potentially, by any other member states, signatories believe.
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Pavel Antonov and Ksenia Vakhrusheva contributed to this article.
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