This is an old revision of this page, as edited by DonaldDuck (talk | contribs) at 01:51, 7 March 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 01:51, 7 March 2010 by DonaldDuck (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Russian-Chechen Peace Treaty (or Moscow Peace Treaty ) was a formal peace treaty "on peace and the principles of Russian-Chechen relations" following the First Chechen War of 1994-1996. It was signed by the president of Russia Boris Yeltsin and the newly-elected president of Chechnya Aslan Maskhadov, on May 12, 1997, at the Moscow Kremlin.
The 1997 agreement was preceded by the Khasavyurt Accord signed by Maskhadov, then the chief of staff of Chechen separatist forces, and the Russian general Alexander Lebed on August 30, 1996, which had formally ended the war in Chechnya with the withdrawal of all federal forces and administration, and thus the return to uneasy status quo of 1991-1994. During the often-tense subsequent talks, the Russian negotiating team was headed by Ivan Rybkin, Lebed's replacement in the post of chief negotiator, and their Chechen counterpart included Movladi Udugov and Akhmed Zakayev. In January 1997, Russia officially recognized the new Chechen government of president Maskhadov, paving the way for his meeting with Yeltsin. Shortly before flying off to Moscow, Maskhadov persuaded a renegade commander Salman Raduyev to cease his agitation and provocations against Russia.
In the short treaty the two sides agreed to reject "forever" the use of force or threat of force in resolving disputed issues, and to build bilateral relations the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria "on the generally recognized principles and norms of international law." Besides Maskhadov and Yeltsin, former Chechen acting president Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev also took part in the signing, together with Zakayev and Udugov, and several Russian top government officials. According to Yelstin, this was a "peace deal of historic dimensions, putting a full stop to 400 years of history ". It was then complemented by a longer intergovernmental economic agreement signed the same day by Aslan Maskhadov and the Russian prime minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, including the heated issue of how much Russia would pay the devastated republic in war damages.
The Moscow treaty caused great jubilation in Chechnya, but the key issue of independence was not resolved. According to the Khasavyurt Accord, all agreements on the relations between the Grozny and Moscow should be regulated until the end of 2001, however in 1999 Moscow nullified the peace treaty and the Russian forces invaded the breakway republic again, occupying its whole territory by the next year. In 2003, Russia created the new consitution for Chechnya, according to which the Chechen Republic is one of federal subjects of the Russian Federation. Maskhadov has been killed by Russian special forces in 2005. The increasingly radicalized Chechen separatist movement evolved into an interethnic, pan-Islamic militant network, and in 2007 its originally nationalist goal of an independent and secular Chechnya has been officially abandoned in favor of an unified Islamic state encompassing most of Russia's North Caucasus.
References
- Aslan Maskhadov: Five Steps into History, Prague Watchdog, September 29th 2003
- Timeline: Chechnya, BBC News, 10 February 2010
- ^ Chechnya: The Turning Point That Wasn't, RFE/RL, May 11, 2007
- ^ Yeltsin Signs Peace Treaty With Chechnya, The New York Times, May 13, 1997
External links
- Chechnya: Why Did 1997 Peace Agreement Fail?, RFE/RL, May 11, 2007