Crimea: An illegal and unconstitutional vote
A Crimean Tatar youth holding a sign reading No illegal referendum as pro-Ukrainian demonstrators marched in the streets of Simferopol on Friday.
By John Kittmer *
A choice isnt a choice when it is made with a gun to your head.
Yet on Sunday, the people of Crimea will be asked to make an impossible choice: to vote to become subjugated by Russia or to vote for independence with no guarantee that Russia will show any more respect for the sovereignty of an independent Crimea than it did for the territorial integrity of an independent Ukraine.
The odds are clearly stacked in Russias favor like the toss of a coin. Heads Russia wins. Tails Crimea loses.
The vote whatever its outcome is both illegal and unconstitutional: There can be absolutely no doubt about that. The terms of the Ukrainian Constitution are unequivocal: The vote can only be convened at the request of 3 million citizens; it must be an all-Ukraine referendum; and it can only be called by the Ukrainian Parliament. None of these conditions has been met.
The vote will be illegitimate. How can a ballot held in the shadow cast by the presence of armed Russian troops, in a region under military occupation, be anything else?
These questions should be settled in free and fair referenda as we will see in Scotland later this year. But Sundays referendum in Crimea will be neither free nor fair.
For the last two decades, we have sought to put the tension and mistrust of the Cold War behind us: to recognize the powerful and positive contribution Russia brings to the international community and to the prosperity of all our people.
A web of international agreements and institutions has been put in place both to help avoid repeating...
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