OSCE PA in the News
This section is an international media review. It contains media reports, both in print and broadcasting, about the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly and its members. The reports are displayed in their original languages and are only occasionally translated into English.
It also contains a special section for op-ed articles, columns and commentary, written by members or staff of the Assembly about their work for the Assembly as sanctioned by the Assembly leadership.
OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Supports Kyrgyz Inquiry; UN Response Awaited
28-07-10
As the Kyrgyz Health Ministry reports a higher death toll of 355, and NGOs continue to bring forward allegations of many more deaths, victims of the conflict in southern Kyrgyzstan are hoping for an impartial international investigation that could establish the facts. Facing ongoing persecution, thousands of Uzbeks have already left for Russia and other countries, EurasiaNet reports, making tracking of their testimony difficult.
Petros Efthymiou, the newly-elected president of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE PA), said today his organization supports the efforts of Finnish parliamentarian Kimmo Kiljunen, who began putting together an international commission to investigate the atrocities in southern Kyrgyzstan earlier this month.
“I am pleased to offer my support to Kimmo Kiljunen; his extensive experience of working with Central Asia for more than a decade makes him eminently qualified to fulfil this role,” Efthymiou was quoted as saying in a press release on the OSCE PA website.
Kiljunen, a member of the Finnish Social Democratic Party and the OSCE PA Special Representative for Central Asia, said " I hope to gather all relevant parties in a joint effort intensifying this important task and its contribution to the reconciliation process in the country,” adding he had been asked by Kyrgyz President Roza Otunbayeva to lead the investigation. He will be traveling to Moscow and Geneva next week to continue building support for his commission.
Kiljunen said he wanted his commission to include the OSCE, the EU, the UN and the Commonwealth of Independent States. "Co-operation with other organizations such as the Collective Security Treaty Organization and the Shanghai Co-operation Organization will also be explored," he said. The CIS, CSTO, and SCO do not perform human rights investigations, although the CSTO has offered to help in identifying suspects. The CSTO declined to send any kind of peace-keeping operation in June when Otunbayeva requested it, although some equipment and logistical back-up have been supplied to Kyrgyz police.
The ambitious call for an inquiry with so many multilateral bodies represented
prompted some observers close to the OSCE to question whether so many diverse agencies in fact were all backing such an operation. Other branches of the OSCE say that despite offering to help, they have not been asked to participate. The Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) has conducted such inquiries in the past.
"ODIHR would be ready and able to conduct an inquiry into the events in the south of Kyrgyzstan if requested to do so by Kyrgyzstan, the OSCE Chairmanship or the Permanent Council," Jens Eschenbaecher, spokesman for ODIHR told EurasiaNet July 26.
Eschenbaecher says ODIHR's director Janez Lenarcic met with Otunbayeva on June 28 and conveyed readiness to conduct such an inquiry in Kyrgyzstan but has not received any request since then. ODIHR has conducted such inquiries in the past, such as the human rights assessment mission to war-affected areas following the conflict in Georgia in 2008, which was requested by the then-Finnish Chairmanship.
By contrast, the current Chair-in-Office, Kazakh Foreign Minister Kanat Saudabayev has not yet commented on the international investigation. Frane Maroevic, deputy spokesperson of the OSCE, told EurasiaNet, "The Chairmanship and ODIHR have not received any request to participate in this Commission and participation in the International Investigation Commission is outside the scope of the mandate of the High Commissioner on National Minorities." While both Kiljunen and Otunbayeva originally told reporters the HCNM would participate, the OSCE spokesperson said its role will be limited to an offer to provide training to experts advising the commission.
Kyrgyzstan would need to request other specific OSCE bodies to participate in the investigation and has not done so, he added. As with the Georgian investigation, support from the chair-in-office and the human rights office of the OSCE could strengthen the institutional backing for the findings.
Otunbayeva, a former member of the Kyrgyz parliament and herself a former member of the OSCE PA, wrote a letter to the UN Secretary General on July 21 asking for UN cooperation and is awaiting reply.
The prospects for any action from the UN Security Council are bleak, especially now. Russia has the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council in August, and has blocked any UN action on Kyrgyzstan, saying it is a regional matter to be addressed by bodies such as the OSCE and CSTO. Even so, the Security Council may get a briefing from Amb. Miroslav Jenča who runs the UN Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia in Ashgabat, who has visited Kyrgyzstan and briefed the Council in spite of Russia's objections in the past. And there is a precedent for the UN Security Council supporting a commission of inquiry organized by the Secretary General in Guinea.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights separately sent a team to Osh and High Commissioner Navi Pillay has expressed concerns about ongoing human rights violations. So far she herself called for an independent investigation to take place rather than joining this one. The UN usually performs investigations alone in order to control the standards.
Robert Blake, Assistant Secretary in the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, testified to the U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe on July 27 that “the United States welcomes President Otunbayeva’s decision” to ask Kiljunen to organize the investigation.
OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Launching Investigation in Kyrgyzstan
24-07-10
Kimmo Kiljunen, the Special Representative for Central Asia of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE PA) told reporters in Bishkek July 22 that an international commission will begin work in August to investigate the recent conflict in southern Kyrgyzstan, finchannel.com reported, citing RIA Novosti.
"The purpose of our commission is impartial investigation of all facts connected with violence eruption in Osh city, Osh and Jalal-Abad oblasts of Kyrgyzstan,"24.kg quoted him as saying.
Kiljunen said representatives of the OSCE, the European Union, and the United Nations would be involved in the commission, and that the Commonwealth of Independent States has also agreed to participate. In response to a reporter's question about the possibility of including experts from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Kiljunen said, "This concerns other organizations. We will look into the methods of such cooperation," RIA Novosti reported.
Kiljunen said that Interim President Roza Otunbayeva had agreed to coordinate work forming the commission, which would make recommendations to the government on how to avoid a recurrence of such clashes.
Kiljunen said he would work with Kyrgyz law-enforcement officials as well as the Kyrgyz national commission of Abdygany Erkebaev, 24kg.org reported. Erkebaev's commission, originally established to find facts about the April events surrounding the ouster of former president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, has 25 members, including interim government officials, NGOs, journalists, and political scientists. Kiljunen, a multilingual specialist on international affairs, is a member of the Finnish Parliament from the Social Democratic Party serving on the Committee on Foreign Relations and has worked for UNDP and UNICEF.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, has also sent a team to make an initial assessment of human rights violations in southern Kyrgyzstan and has found that Kyrgyz security forces are alleged to be involved in numerous arbitrary detentions and torture, mainly of Uzbek men. She has called for “a thorough international, independent and impartial investigation into the events in June.”
International commission to launch inquiry into Kyrgyz interethnic clashes in August
22.07.10
BISHKEK. An international commission will in August start an investigation into the recent riots in southern Kyrgyzstan, an Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) special representative said on July 22, according to RIA Novosti.
"We have already started work on forming a commission so that the international investigation can begin in August," the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly's Special Representative for Central Asia Kimmo Kiljunen said.
Violent clashes broke out in the south of Kyrgyzstan in mid-June between minority Uzbeks and ethnic Kyrgyz. The official death toll is around 300 but locals say it as many as 2,000 people could have been killed. Over 100,000 refugees fled to neighboring Uzbekistan and hundreds of houses were destroyed.
Kiljunen said Kyrgyz Interim President Rosa Outnbayeva had agreed to coordinate work on forming the commission.
"We will draw up a number of recommendations outlining what should be done to avoid a re-occurrence of such events," he added, adding that representatives from the OSCE, the EU and the United Nations will be involved.
Kiljunen said that the Commonwealth of Independent Sates [CIS] has also agreed to participate in the investigation.
"This concerns other organizations too. We will look into the methods of such cooperation," Kiljunen said in answer to a question about the possibility of including experts from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in the investigation.
He said he hoped funding would come from the governments of a number of countries and a separate fund would be set up for witness protection.
The OSCE has agreed to deploy a Police Advisory Group in Kyrgyzstan to help reduce inter-ethnic tensions and strengthen local police forces, a statement published on the OSCE website said.
International commission to probe into unrest in Kyrgyz south
INTERFAX (BBC MONITORING)
16-07-10
Bishkek, 16 July -- The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly's special representative for Central Asia, Kimmo Kiljunen, will lead an international investigation into the events that took place in the Kyrgyz south on 10-14 June, the Kyrgyz government's press service has told Interfax today.
According to the press service, the proposal to set up an international commission for investigating the causes of the events was put forward by the foreign ministries of the Scandinavian countries, and Kyrgyz [Interim] President Roza Otunbayeva backed the proposal.
According to the press service, the Kyrgyz leadership also urged that the international commission and the national commission, which had been set up in Kyrgyzstan, conduct well-coordinated joint work to thoroughly study the causes and consequences of the tragic events, which occurred the Kyrgyz south this June, and to work out recommendations on them. The national commission is expected to end its work before! 10 September.
OSCE PA supports demand for Russian troop withdrawal
A delegation of the Moldovan Parliament participated during July 6-10 in the 19th annual session of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, held in the Norwegian capital, Oslo.
Adopting a Resolution on Moldova, the OSCE PA appealed to the Russian Federation "to renew and finalize the process of withdrawal of its troops and munitions from the territory of the Republic of Moldova in accordance with relevant principles of international law and commitments undertaken in the OSCE framework".
The OSCE PA further "invites all participants in the Transnistrian conflict settlement to undertake consultations with a view to transforming the current peacekeeping mechanism into a multinational civilian mission under the international (OSCE) mandate".
Dedicated to the "Rule of Law: Combating Transnational Crime and Corruption", the 19th OSCE Parliamentary Assembly brought together over 300 parliamentarians from 56 OSCE member countries.
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