BERLIN,
October 28 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Germany wants the
Chechnya conflict on the agenda of a summit between the European Union
and Russia in Brussels next month, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said
Monday, October 28. Chechen rebels, meanwhile, reopened the door to
peace talks with Russia to end their bloody conflict.
The
German spokeswoman said that it was essential for the EU and Moscow to
address the bloody anti-insurgency campaign in the southern breakaway
republic at the November 11 summit as well as other issues affecting
bilateral relations, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"The
subject of Chechnya has always been on the agenda of political
dialogue between the European Union and Russia," she added.
She
also welcomed the fact that the two-day World Chechen Congress could
go ahead despite protests from Russia, which was incensed it was
taking place only days after the end of a mass hostage-taking by
Chechen rebels in Moscow.
"It
would not have been possible or right to cancel such a conference in
Germany either," she said.
Denmark,
which currently holds the rotating EU presidency, refused to bow to
Russian demands over the weekend to stop the congress in Copenhagen.
However,
in a step to placate the Kremlin, it announced it was moving the
summit - aimed at developing a strategic partnership and settling a
row over the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad - to Brussels.
For
their part, representatives of the elected government in Chechnya said
they were open to peace talks with Russia to end their bloody
conflict.
"There
is no military solution to the conflict, only a political
solution," Akhmed Zakayev, the envoy of elected Chechen President
Aslan Maskhadov, said at an international conference on Chechnya that
aroused fury in Moscow.
"President
Maskhadov is ready to negotiate without preconditions, as he said
before. Now it is up to the Russian leadership," Zakayev said
through an interpreter.
Maskhadov,
for his part, warned Russian President Vladimir Putin that more
attacks like the bloody Moscow hostage siege were inevitable unless he
seeks a peace settlement.
"There
is no military solution," he said in a telephone interview with
AFP. "You will never be able to crush the Chechen people and
bring it to its knees. There is one reasonable, correct step - to sit
down at the negotiating table.
“All
the rest is death, blood, hostages and the death of absolutely
innocent people," added Maskhadov, in his first public statement
since the Moscow theatre hostage crisis.
The
Russian authorities have ruled out all talks with Maskhadov since
rebels launched a massive anti-insurgency campaign in the southern
republic in October 1999 and peace looked even more elusive after the
three-day hostage drama.
The
two-day World Chechen Congress opened as Russia was holding a day of
national mourning to honor the more than 115 hostages, most of whom
died from a mysterious gas used when Russian troops stormed a Moscow
theatre to break the siege.
The
Kremlin accused the Danish authorities of "solidarity with
terrorists" and threatened to boycott a November 11 summit with
the European Union.
However,
Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller said Copenhagen could not
cancel the Chechnya meeting but that it had moved the November 11
summit to Brussels in order to maintain good relations with Moscow.
"The
participants at this (Chechnya) conference are not terrorists, but we
decided to transfer (the summit) because it is essential to avoid a
crisis between Russia and the EU," Moeller told Danish
television.
Moeller
said the EU wanted to "strengthen relations with Russia, and
there is too much at stake to let these relations deteriorate over
this affair."
The
congress, planned by the Chechen Diaspora and the Danish Centre for
Holocaust and Genocide Studies, was focusing on the war in the
Caucasian Russian republic and the problems of refugees and internally
displaced persons.
Danish
opposition deputy Holger Nielsen told AFP before addressing the
meeting: "I don't understand how the Russians can imagine that
any Danish government can cancel a meeting like this. We have a
democracy in Denmark, we have democratic rights to hold meetings like
this."
Nielsen
condemned the hostage taking, saying: "It was a disaster for the
Chechen cause."
But
Mohammad Shishani, president of the World Congress of Chechen
Diasporas, told delegates that Russia was guilty of state terrorism
and described Chechen rebels who seized the Moscow theatre as
"freedom fighters."
"The
hostage takers in the Moscow theatre were young men and women...
driven by desperation to abnormal actions" he said.
In
a separate related development, Russian Communist Party leader Gennady
Zyuganov broke ranks with other (Russian) politicians Monday and
criticized the death of 115 hostages in a weekend rescue operation in
Moscow as "unjustifiable."
"More
than a hundred deaths, serious physical and mental trauma for a huge
number of people, these are unjustifiable losses. The authorities were
incapable of taking preventative measures to stop such actions,"
he said in an interview with the Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper.
The
Communist leader demanded an emergency joint session of both houses of
parliament to "examine the state of national security."
"The
problem is not restricted to a single terrorist act. All security
structures have been shattered and we believe that we no longer have
an efficient government," Zyuganov added.
Commenting
on Chechnya, Zyuganov said that "there is not and never has been
a military solution to Chechnya."
Moscow
should "prepare a plan for the economic reconstruction of the
republic, a plan for a political settlement. If Chechnya produces
nothing, if children aged 10 don't go to school, and if they have
nothing to occupy, then you won't achieve anything there with military
methods," he declared.