Ukraine’s Muslim Crimea battalion yearns for lost homeland
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[June 01, 2022] By
Max Hunder
YASNOHORODKA, Ukraine (Reuters) - Standing
amid the charred remains of a roadside hotel on a major highway near
Kyiv, Isa Akayev explained what drove him to build his Muslim volunteer
unit and fight for Ukraine.
"I just want to return home, to Crimea," said Akayev, 57, a
gently-spoken father of 13 who sports a long greying beard and shaven
head.
When Russia annexed his home region from Ukraine in 2014, Akayev moved
to Kyiv and formed the Crimea battalion, a small unit dominated by
Crimean Tatars, the Muslim Turkic group indigenous to the Black Sea
peninsula.
Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, his unit's 50 men
took part in battles around the Kyiv region but are now seeking to be
deployed to the southern front to fight in the Kherson region bordering
Crimea.
Their eventual goal of recapturing Crimea looks harder than ever after
much of the Kherson region fell under Russian control early in the war,
pushing Ukrainian forces back more than 100 km (60 miles) from the
peninsula.
But it is enough to rally the Tatars - and their Muslim Russian allies
in the unit - behind the cause of Ukraine, which needs all the manpower
it can muster as the war grinds towards its 100th day and Moscow's
forces make slow but steady progress.
ANNEXATION
Many Tatars opposed Moscow's annexation of Crimea, which had followed
the overthrow of a pro-Kremlin Ukrainian president amid mass street
protests.
Their suspicion of Moscow has deep roots. Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
ordered the mass deportation of Crimea's Tatars - Akayev’s grandparents
among them - in 1944, accusing them of collaboration with Nazi Germany.
They were only allowed to return with their descendants in the 1980s -
as Akayev did from Uzbekistan in 1989 - and many welcomed the 1991
collapse of the Soviet Union as a liberation.
Fearing a new wave of repression under Moscow's rule, Akayev moved to
Kyiv in 2014, where he was initially rebuffed by Ukraine's security
forces.
"It was very difficult, many people didn’t trust Muslims, and especially
Crimean Tatars. Everyone thought we would be the separatists, not
someone else," he said.
But when Russian-backed separatists took up arms against Ukraine in its
eastern Donbas region in 2014, all that changed.
His group was allowed to register as a volunteer unit under Ukraine’s
interior ministry and fought in the ensuing conflict, with three of its
men being wounded. Last month they signed contracts to become a
fully-fledged unit of Ukraine's army.
Dozens of other volunteer battalions sprang up in 2014 and began helping
Ukraine's unprepared regular army to fight in the Donbas. They included
two Chechen units, a Georgian one, and several with a right-wing
nationalist ethos. Some have since disarmed while others have joined the
regular army.
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Members of the Crimea battalion, a Ukrainian army unit made up
mostly of Crimean Tatar Muslims, perform Friday prayers, as Russia's
attacks on Ukraine continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 27, 2022. Picture
taken May 27, 2022. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Russia has been scathing about such units. Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said on the eve of the war that providing
shoulder-held anti-aircraft missiles to former volunteer battalions
was evidence of a "militaristic psychosis".
A Ukrainian presidential envoy said in March that
such volunteer battalions now numbered more than 100. Ukraine's
government celebrates them as heroes, celebrating their exploits on
an annual volunteers' day.
TATAR IDENTITY
Just over half of Akayev's battalion are Crimean Tatars, who make up
about 15% of Crimea's population.
"The core (of the unit) is Crimean because they want to liberate
their peninsula, but they don’t have a rule that it should only be
Crimeans," said Serhiy, a Ukrainian who converted to Islam in 2004
and is the unit’s imam.
The Crimean cause provides a focus for the unit, which includes a
number of Russian citizens. Its few non-Muslim members are required
to follow certain rules, including a ban on alcohol.
"The Crimean Tatars... suffered more under Russian
occupation, and so they feel closer to us," says Muaz, an ethnic
Kabardian from Russia's North Caucasus who joined the battalion a
year ago.
A United Nations report in 2017 accused Russia of committing "grave"
human rights violations in Crimea, including subjecting the Tatars
to intimidation, house searches and detentions.
Moscow, which in 2016 banned the Mejlis, a body representing Crimean
Tatars, rejected the report's findings. It says a March 2014
referendum legitimised its "incorporation" of Crimea.
The Crimea battalion performed reconnaissance against Russian forces
around Yasnohorodka, a village 25km west of Kyiv, and later in
nearby Motyzhyn, Akayev said.
"The residents here were initially very scared when they saw us
because they didn't know who we were. We had to shout 'we are
Ukrainian'... then people started slowly coming out of their homes
and they gave us tea."
Nearby, the burnt-out hotel bears a special significance for Akayev.
"We wanted to buy this place, to build a Crimean Tatar school and a
mosque here... It didn’t come to anything, and then this happened,"
Akayev said, gesturing at the building’s charred remains which he
said was the result of Russian shelling.
"I (still) dream about this project, but really I just want to
return home to Crimea."
(Editing by Conor Humphries and Gareth Jones)
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