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- <text>
- <title>
- Estonia, Latvia And Lithuania
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Human Rights Watch World Report 1992
- Helsinki Watch: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>(This chapter addresses human rights developments in the Baltic
- states following international and Soviet acceptance of their
- independence in late August and early September 1991. Events in
- these states earlier in the year are treated as part of the
- separate chapter on the Soviet Union.)
- </p>
- <p>Human Rights Developments
- </p>
- <p> After more than fifty years of rule by the Soviet
- government, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania gained international
- recognition as independent, sovereign states in late August
- 1991. (On August 22, Iceland became the first country to
- recognize the independence of the Baltic states. Denmark
- followed on August 24; Argentina and Norway on August 25;
- Canada, Malta and Czechoslovakia on August 26; and the European
- Community, on August 27. The United States granted recognition
- on September 2, the thirty-second country to do so.) The Kremlin
- followed suit on September 6. All three new nations were
- admitted to the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
- (CSCE) and participated in the Moscow CSCE conference in
- September. In October, they were admitted to the United Nations,
- and later that month they became associate members of NATO.
- </p>
- <p> The Baltic states quickly made their presence felt on the
- international human rights scene. For example, Lithuania
- expressed its interest in ratifying the U.N. Covenant on Civil
- and Political Rights. Estonia acceded in December to the
- optional protocol of that covenant, thereby allowing reporting
- of individual violations to the U.N. Human Rights Committee. In
- May 1990, before international recognition of its independent
- status, the Latvian government acceded to some 50 international
- treaties, including those on human rights.
- </p>
- <p> An important human rights issue in all three Baltic states
- is the status of national minorities who were Soviet citizens
- when the Soviet Union was a single political entity. Many of
- these minorities may have to fulfill new naturalization
- requirements to become citizens of the states in which they
- reside. Proposed new citizenship laws became the focus of
- intense debate. These questions reached a head in fall of 1991
- when all three Baltic states issued new laws or official
- guidelines on citizenship.
- </p>
- <p> The laws and principles on citizenship in the three Baltic
- states share certain features. They grant citizenship
- automatically to those who were citizens or residents of their
- respective states at the time of Soviet occupation--1940--and to their direct descendants. These laws and principles also
- establish certain residency and language requirements for
- naturalization, define criteria for ineligibility, and--with
- the exception of Latvia which changed its law on November 27
- forbid dual citizenship. The ban on dual citizenship has met a
- hostile reception from emigres who would like to return or take
- up citizenship in one of the Baltic states but do not want to
- give up their adopted citizenship in other countries.
- </p>
- <p> Lithuania was the first to produce a law on citizenship,
- promulgating it in November 1989. (Subsequently, Lithuania
- issued a new citizenship law on December 10, 1991; at this
- writing Helsinki Watch has only obtained oral translations of
- some portions of its text by the Lithuanian Embassy.) The 1989
- law automatically extends citizenship to those who can prove
- they were permanent residents, and were legally employed, in
- Lithuania for at least ten years before the law entered into
- force. Those who could meet this requirement, were given two
- years--until November 1991--to opt for Lithuanian
- citizenship. The new law ends this "grace period" for selecting
- citizenship for those who do not meet the ten-year
- residency/employment requirement.
- </p>
- <p> Other naturalization conditions state that individuals may
- be naturalized in the future if they have been permanent
- residents in Lithuania for ten years with legal employment or
- a source of legal support, know the Lithuanian language, and
- know the basic provisions of the Lithuanian Constitution. (The
- law thus distinguishes between two groups of people: those who
- had settled in Lithuania ten years before it became a sovereign
- state, and those who migrated to Lithuania more recently or
- after the law's adoption. (The preliminary information that
- Helsinki Watch has obtained on the 1991 Lithuanian citizenship
- law did not shed light on the key issue of the rights of
- permanent resident aliens.)
- </p>
- <p> Two provisions in the Lithuanian law violate international
- human rights standards. Under its provisions on naturalization,
- citizenship would be denied to recent migrants who, among other
- things, have been sentenced to imprisonment for "a serious,
- deliberate crime" or who are alcoholics and drug addicts.
- Denying citizenship to persons whose criminal conviction took
- place before the law's adoption adds an additional, ex post
- facto penalty to their punishment, a condition forbidden by
- international standards set forth in Article 15 of the
- International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Excluding
- from naturalization permanent residents who are alcoholics and
- drug addicts is particularly pernicious because it would likely
- discourage them from seeking needed treatment. (These
- conditions still seem to stand in the 1991 Lithuanian
- citizenship law.)
- </p>
- <p> On October 15, the Latvian Supreme Council (parliament)
- issued a conceptual framework to guide future legislation on
- citizenship in Latvia. This legal framework has been attacked
- by Latvian emigres, who eventually managed to reverse its
- initial ban on dual citizenship; by the Latvian radical right,
- who claim that the present Supreme Council lacks the needed
- legal authority to issue it; and by groups representing various
- segments of the non-Latvian half of the population. It is
- likely that these questions will be the subject of many more
- debates before the new Latvian citizenship law achieves its
- final shape.
- </p>
- <p> The framework first affirms the validity of the 1919 Latvian
- citizenship law, in effect in pre-Soviet Latvia. The framework
- also states that many Soviet citizens settled in Latvia as a
- result of the long and illegal Soviet annexation of the
- republic. It points out that one purpose of this law is to
- "liquidate the consequences of the Soviet Union's occupation and
- annexation of Latvia" and renew the legal rights of citizens of
- the Republic of Latvia. Therefore, it revokes the 1940 Soviet
- law on citizenship for Latvia.
- </p>
- <p> The Latvian government's desire to try to put right the
- wrongs of Soviet rule are understandable. Even so, some of the
- categories of those ruled ineligible for Latvian citizenship
- are overly broad: those convicted for attempting to undermine
- or overthrow by unconstitutional methods the independent and
- democratic Latvian republic, its parliamentary system or its
- government; those serving in the ranks of the Soviet military,
- MVD or KGB forces and those who settled in Latvia after 1940
- upon retirement from these forces; common criminals and those
- convicted of crimes against humanity; those convicted of
- disseminating chauvinist, fascist, communist or totalitarian
- ideologies; those sent to Latvia after June 17, 1940, as
- Communist Party and Komsomol officials; and registered
- alcoholics, addicts and those without a legal source of income.
- </p>
- <p> The legal framework states that those who were citizens or
- legal residents of Latvia before 1940 and their descendants
- must register for a Latvian passport by July 1, 1992. In
- general, anyone living in Latvia and wanting to become a citizen
- can expect to be naturalized if he or she submits an application
- by July 1, 1992. Such applicants must show: knowledge of spoken
- Latvian; proof that he or she is no longer a citizen of another
- country; proof of a minimum of sixteen years' residency in
- Latvia; acquaintance with the Latvian Constitution; and
- willingness to swear allegiance to the republic of Latvia.
- </p>
- <p> While most non-Latvian residents of the republic can meet
- the sixteen-year residency requirement, some fear
- discriminatory application of the Latvian language competency
- exam. According to the 1989 census, only one-fourth of the
- non-Latvian population speaks Latvian. Protests from various
- segments of the non-Latvian community were loud.
- </p>
- <p> The Estonian Supreme Council discussed a draft citizenship
- law on October 15 which would grant citizenship to those who had
- it before 1940 and to their descendants. It also offers
- Estonian citizenship to those who later moved to Estonia, can
- show knowledge of the Estonian language, and have lived in
- Estonia for at least three years. Language instruction free of
- charge would be offered to those who have applied for
- citizenship. The draft law also bars dual citizenship and sets
- a one-year deadline for Estonians living abroad to choose
- between renewing Estonian citizenship or retaining foreign
- citizenship.
- </p>
- <p> The Estonian government issued a call to the republic's
- political parties to offer suggestions on the draft citizenship
- law. Conflicting views were expressed on such key points as
- whether permanent residents should be granted citizenship, the
- length of the minimum residence requirement, application of the
- language competence requirement, and whether to allow dual
- citizenship. Given the wide range of opinion, it seems likely
- that the debate in Estonia over the citizenship issue will be
- lengthy and heated.
- </p>
- <p> On September 10, Lithuanian officials disbanded popularly
- elected local councils in the Salcininkai region and the town
- of Snieckus, both of which have large ethnic Polish populations,
- and in Polish-dominated parts of Vilnius. The Lithuanian
- government tried to justify the action by claiming that these
- councils had supported the August coup in Moscow. That other
- motives may have been at play is suggested by the government's
- replacement of the heads of the councils with Lithuanians.
- </p>
- <p> The action raised renewed concern about the rights of
- Lithuania's Polish minority, which accounts for seven percent
- of Lithuania's population. The government responded to criticism
- by announcing its willingness to receive international experts
- to investigate the situation of its ethnic minorities. It
- claims that Poles enjoy the same rights and freedoms as
- Lithuanians, including the right to study in their native
- language.
- </p>
- <p> In late August, the Estonian government stopped the
- activities of the city councils and city administrative units
- of Kohtla-Jarva, Sallamae and Narva in northeastern Estonia--all towns with large ethnic Russian populations. The councils
- were alleged to have expressed support for the coup in Moscow
- and a criminal investigation was begun against the council
- heads. The Estonian government set a date in October for new
- elections to the town councils. A Helsinki Watch inquiry of
- Estonian diplomats in the United States produced no further
- information on the subject.
- </p>
- <p> After the adoption of the Lithuanian rehabilitation law in
- 1990, the Lithuanian Supreme Court issued more than 22,000
- certificates rehabilitating people who had been convicted and
- deported by Soviet courts for a variety of political crimes.
- The purpose of the law was to exonerate those who had been
- arrested on false charges, denied due process or forced to
- confess. Although the law on rehabilitation prohibits
- exonerating war criminals, among those who were rehabilitated
- were people convicted by Soviet courts of crimes against
- humanity for, among other things, participating in Nazi crimes
- against Jews during World War II. The government denied
- rehabilitations to 450 applicants who "[had] blood on their
- hands."
- </p>
- <p> Under intense pressure from the international community, the
- Lithuanian government in September admitted that it had not
- gathered adequate information on those who had been exonerated,
- but said that guilt would have to be proven on a case-by case
- basis before rehabilitation would be revoked. The Lithuanian
- government maintains that the mistaken rehabilitation of war
- criminals was inadvertent. Five such cases are currently being
- investigated. To facilitate the process of gathering
- information on possible war criminals, the Lithuanian government
- offered to collaborate with the Israeli Parliament and the U.S.
- Justice Department. In addition, on October 25, the Presidium
- of the Lithuanian Supreme Council adopted a resolution to create
- an Office of Special Investigations to collaborate with
- counterpart agencies around the world in the investigation of
- crimes against humanity. The Latvian government has also
- recently indicated its willingness to cooperate with the Office
- of Special Investigations on war crimes cases.
- </p>
- <p>The Right to Monitor
- </p>
- <p> Helsinki Watch is not aware of any instance in which human
- rights or other independent monitors have been hindered in
- their work by any of the new governments of the Baltic states.
- Political pluralism, certainly in public expression of various
- viewpoints, has, for the most part, prevailed in Latvia,
- Lithuania and Estonia in 1991.
- </p>
- <p>U.S. Policy
- </p>
- <p>(See the section on the Soviet Union for pre-August treatment
- of U.S. policy issues in the Baltic states.)
- </p>
- <p> The United States formally recognized the Baltic republics
- on September 2, the thirty-second country to do so, and
- strongly endorsed membership of all three Baltic states in the
- CSCE process. President Bush supports extending Most Favored
- Nation trading status to the Baltic republics and exempting them
- from the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, which limits access to that
- status.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration reacted strongly to the
- rehabilitation of possible war criminals in Lithuania. At a
- September 5 press briefing, State Department spokesman Richard
- Boucher expressed strong concern, and promised that the State
- Department would gather more information to follow up on the
- Lithuanian actions. Both President Bush and Secretary of State
- James Baker raised the issue of rehabilitation in their separate
- mid-September meetings with Lithuanian President Vytautas
- Landsbergis. The U.S. Justice Department's Office of Special
- Investigation is providing access to its archives to help ensure
- that questionable rehabilitations are handled correctly.
- </p>
- <p>The Work of Helsinki Watch
- </p>
- <p>(See the section on the Soviet Union for description of Helsinki
- Watch activities in and on the Baltic states before August
- 1991.)
- </p>
- <p> After the Baltic states gained wide international
- recognition of their independent status in the fall of 1991,
- Helsinki Watch continued its work on certain human rights
- issues. Helsinki Watch arranged a discussion at the Moscow CSCE
- conference in September of the January incidents of lethal
- force. Discussion participants included witnesses to the events
- and officials from the Baltic republics.
- </p>
- <p> The new citizenship law of Latvia has been of particular
- concern to Helsinki Watch. The organization sent a detailed
- letter to Latvian officials with copies to Estonian and
- Lithuanian leaders setting forth its criticisms of the new law.
- </p>
- <p> The rehabilitation by the Lithuanian government of Nazi war
- criminals was another focus of Helsinki Watch concern. The
- organization expressed its concerns about this issue to
- Lithuanian officials in writing and also discussed the problem
- with the Lithuanian procurator general who participated in the
- September Helsinki Watch conference in Moscow on lethal force.
- </p>
- <p> As part of an annual Human Rights Watch series of events
- honoring human rights monitors from various countries, Helsinki
- Watch brought Latvian parliamentarian and veteran human rights
- activist Ints Calitis to the United States.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-