CAIRO,
March 11, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Ukraine’s two-million Muslim
minority are complaining about the alarming escalation of racist
attacks targeting them recently, according to a report sent to
IslamOnline.net Friday, March 11.
The
report, released by the Federation of Social Organizations in Ukraine,
the largest Muslim group in the country, said protests were staged to
urge government actions to stop racial attacks in various patterns.
The
situation is quickly deteriorating in a way completely unprecedented
in the history of the country, especially with the assaults mostly
targeting Arab and Muslim students, the statement warned, citing
testimonies of Arab and Muslim students brutally assaulted by
Ukrainians.
Omar
and Nagui, two Jordanian and Syrian students studying medicine in one
of Kiev’s universities gave one example of such incidents.
While
on their way back from visiting some friends, they were both
surrounded by some 30 Ukrainians, who severely beat them before
vanishing from the key pedestrian crossing.
Omar
suffered a brain clot and a paralysis in his left side of the body,
while Hisham hardly escaped with cerebral concussions and various
bruises.
Protests
The
assault drew local outrage and quick expressions of solidarity.
Students
at the university where the two assaulted students attend converged in
the outside of administration offices calling for action to protect
them.
In
response, university officials promised to closely monitor the
situation. Syrian and Jordanian consulates also called official bodies
for more consultations on the implications.
Fears
over the escalation were also echoed by the Islamic Center in Kiev,
which sent a delegation to visit the two students.
In
another separate incident, another Jordanian medical student was
seriously injured in the eye after an attack by a group of Ukrainian
youths in a Kiev underground station.
The
student, only identified as Mustafa, suffered bruises and injuries in
various parts of his body.
Hisham,
Egyptian, was hit by a knife in his abdomen by an armed man while
getting out of a supermarket in central Kiev.
Fortunately,
Hisham survived the attack, as the knife was stopped by his passport
which he usually keeps under the belt for fears of being lost.
Murad,
a Palestinian air engineering student, was dealt blows while getting
out of a shop. He was faced with 20 more people when he tried to act
in self-defense.
The
discrimination also included Arab and Muslim women, the Federation
said in the report.
Mohamed,
another medical student, was with his wife when he came under a
similar unprovoked attack. When he tried to protect her from the 15
people who encircled them in one of the malls situated at the Victory
Square in Kiev, they were both close to a tragedy.
When
the wife tried to escape, one of the attackers attempted to grab her
before hiding in a nearby store. The aggressors only escaped after
pedestrians called police.
According
to recent estimates, some 50,000 Muslims, mostly foreign, live in Kiev
Discriminated
The
federation said there are many other attacks on Muslims that went
unreported, adding the victims fear revenge or suspect the complaints
would not be taken seriously by police.
International
Religious Freedom Report 2004, issued by the US State Department
annually on the state of religion across the world, said even police
is accused of harassing Muslims in Ukraine.
Muslims
are often subjected to document checks by local police, particularly
in Kharkiv and Poltava, two provinces in the former Soviet country,
said the State Department report.
Islamic
minority leaders expressed frustration with the Ministry of Education,
which has yet to register a single Islamic school, and that
representatives of the Muslim minority noted they have been unable to
register a community in Kharkiv for the past 11 years, it added.
The
Crimean Tatars were deported forcibly from Crimea in 1944, but they
began returning in 1989. There are approximately 300,000 Crimean
Tatars in Ukraine; 267,000 live in the Black Sea peninsula.
Hopes
The
minority leaders hope the recent change of regime would mean the
government would move to stop attacks against Muslims or improve their
conditions.
Newly-elected
President Viktor Yanukovych met with Muslim leaders in Ukraine on the
occasion of Eid Al-Adha late January, saying he waited for the
minority to “refresh moral and religious foundations of
Ukrainians”.
“We
see Islam as a chance for reviving spiritualism, which we lack
here,” Yanukovych has said during the ceremony.
Yanukovych’s
predecessor, Leonid Kuchma, warned in 1999 that his country was facing
the threat of what he called Islamic extremism, and asked security
officials to take measures to protect the nation amid fears that
Chechen fighters are crossing the borders into Ukraine.
In
February, a Europe-based Muslim activist has called for according due
attention to the sizable Muslim community in Eastern Europe, including
Ukraine, which has broken loose from the Communist yoke.