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[DOCID: f:sr27ats.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 27
To express the sense of the Senate regarding the 1944 deportation of
the Chechen people to central Asia, and for other purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
February 15, 2001
Mr. Helms (for himself and Mr. Wellstone) submitted the following
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations
April 3, 2001
Reported by Mr. Helms, without amendment
April 6, 2001
Considered and agreed to
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
To express the sense of the Senate regarding the 1944 deportation of
the Chechen people to central Asia, and for other purposes.
Whereas for more than 200 years, the Chechen people have resisted the efforts of
the Russian government to drive them from their land and to deny them
their own culture;
Whereas beginning on February 23, 1944, nearly 500,000 Chechen civilians from
the northern Caucasus were arrested en masse and forced onto trains for
deportation to central Asia;
Whereas tens of thousands of Chechens, mainly women, children, and the elderly,
died en route to central Asia;
Whereas mass killings and the use of poisons against the Chechen people
accompanied the deportation;
Whereas the Chechen deportees were not given food, housing, or medical attention
upon their arrival in central Asia;
Whereas the Soviet Union actively attempted to suppress expressions of Chechen
culture, including language, architecture, literature, music, and
familial relations during the exile of the Chechen people;
Whereas it is generally accepted that more than one-third of the Chechen
population died in transit during the deportation or while living in
exile in central Asia;
Whereas the deportation order was not repealed until 1957;
Whereas the Chechens who returned to Chechnya found their homes and land taken
over by new residents who violently opposed the Chechen return; and
Whereas neither the Soviet Union, nor its successor, the Russian Federation, has
ever accepted full responsibility for the brutalities inflicted upon the
Chechen people: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States should commemorate the 57th
anniversary of the brutal deportation of the Chechen people
from their native land;
(2) the current war in Chechnya should be viewed within the
historical context of repeated abuses suffered by the Chechen
people at the hands of the Russian state;
(3) the United States Government should make every effort
to alleviate the suffering of the Chechen people; and
(4) it is in the interests of the United States, the
Russian Federation, Chechnya, and the international community
to find an immediate, peaceful, and political solution to the
war in Chechnya.
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