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The Congress of Estonia was a rival parliament set up in the Estonian SSR during the process of Estonia's regaining of independence from the Soviet Union. It also challenged the power and authority of the Supreme Soviet of the ESSR. The Congress claimed to represent the highest authority on questions of Estonian statehood and citizenship, deriving this authority from the consent and initiative of the citizens of Estonia. The aim of the congress was to restore Estonian independence based on a principle of legal continuity with the pre-1940 republic of Estonia as established in 1918.
Activity
In 1989 independence activists in the Committees of Citizens of Estonia (Template:Lang-et) started registering people considered to be Estonian citizens by birth according to the jus sanguinis principle, i.e., the people who held Estonian citizenship in June 1940 (when Estonian independence de facto lapsed) and their descendants. People that did not satisfy these criteria could register applications for citizenship. By February 1990, 790,000 provisional citizens and about 60,000 applicants had been registered.
In February 1990, an election of the Congress was held among citizens so registered. The Congress had 499 delegates from 31 distinct political parties. The Estonian National Independence Party won the most seats, other parties represented included the the Popular Front of Estonia, the Heritage Society and the Communist Party of Estonia. The permanent standing committee, the Committee of Estonia was chaired by Tunne Kelam.
In September 1991, a constitutional assembly was formed of equal numbers of members of the Supreme Soviet and the Congress of Estonia. The new constitution was approved by referendum in June 1992. Congress of Estonia and the Supreme Soviet were dissolved in October 1992. In September 1992 the first parliament (Riigikogu) under the new constitution was elected. The reinstated pre-1940 citizenship law did not provide automatic Estonian citizenship to nearly third of Estonia's population who had settled to Estonia during Soviet rule 1945-1991 and had lost their Soviet citizenship when the Soviet Union ceased to exist on 1 January 1992.
Politics
March 1990 also saw the election of the Estonian Supreme Soviet, the first multi-party national elections in the Estonian SSR. Unlike the previous Soviet, which consisting largely of members of the Communist Party of Estonia, the new Supreme Soviet was dominated by the Estonian Popular Front.
The main distinctions between the political ideas of the Congress of Estonia and the Supreme Soviet were:
- Congress of Estonia supported legal continuity of the Republic over declaring the a "Third Republic" (after the First Republic of 1918-1940 and the Soviet Republic of 1940-1991), which was the Supreme Soviet's dominant position;
- Congress of Estonia, as the Citizens' Committees before it, supported continuation in citizenship, as opposed to extending citizenship to all people with propiska in Estonia in 1990 (sometimes called the 'zero variant of citizenship'), including the over 300,000 occupation years' immigrants from other regions of the Soviet Union.
The opposition between the Congress of Estonia and the Supreme Soviet over the first point was the primary reason that the Supreme Soviet didn't "proclaim" or "reestablish" Estonia's independence during the 1991 August Putsch, but instead, as a compromise, decided to "affirm" it. This way, discussions over propriety of the ways could continue, but the independence would be freshly declared.
In later discussions, Congress of Estonia prevailed in both of the above-mentioned points.
Citizenship
After the new constitution got established, in 1992 a new citizenship law recognised the citizenship registrations of the Citizens' Committees as a legal registry of Estonian citizens. Soviet Union's citizens who had filed Citizenship Committee application cards, could receive Estonian citizenship under a simplified procedure. By 1996 a total of 23,326 people had been naturalized by this procedure. Noncitizens had to pass exams in the Estonian language, the Estonian history, and the Constitution of the Republic of Estonia in order to naturalise.
References
- ^ The Restoration of Estonian Independence
- Soviet Union Cry Independence - Time magazine - August 21, 1989
- ^ National minorities in Estonia - Legal Information Centre for Human Rights, April 1998
- Elections and Referendums in Estonia 1989-1999 - Elections to the Estonian Congress 24.02 - 01.03.1990
- Newsletter Vol. 2, No. 22 - New Data and Statistics Nov. 16-30, 1996 (teia.pu.ru)
External links
Elections and referendums in Estonia | |
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