Statement by Nara Narimanova
Crimean Tatar Youth Council
Dear Chairperson, thank you for giving me the floor.
My name is Nara Narimanova, I am from the Crimean Tatar ethnic minority group and I
represent the Crimean Tatar Youth Council. I would like to raise attention to the issues faced by
Crimean Tatar women in Ukraine.
Crimean Tatars, are indigenous to the Crimean peninsula in Ukraine. In 1944, 200,000 Crimean
Tatars accused of collaboration with the Nazis were deported to in Central Asia. and confined in
settlements. Meanwhile, settlers replaced the Crimean Tatars in their lands. 46% of deported
Crimean Tatars perished in less than a decade.
As the Soviet Union collapsed in the early 1990s, Crimean Tatars began to return to their. lands,
where they now constitute an estimated 13% of the Crimea. However, many live in settlements
without basic facilities or rural areas where there is a lack of infrastructure and access to basic
services and they face continued high levels of discrimination and stipma, discouraging the return
of the estimated 150,000 Crimean Tatars from Central Asia. In particular unemployment is a major
problem: 60 per cent of those who have returned are unemployed. The restitution of the land they
owned before deportation is not guaranteed, and. it is illegal to build on or to cultivate land for which
one has no title deed.
Women are particularly vulnerable in this situation as they bear the most of the burden in such
conditions, as they remain closer to the home. The numerous. problems Crimean Tatar women face
upon return are aggravated by non-equality in access to rights and social opportunities. There is no
right to educate children in their mother tongue, meaning many do not have access to learning in
their own language and there is little opportunity to move beyond the limited circumstances
described. There are for example only two universities, which provide.for Crimean Tatars to learn
their mother tongue. Therefore I strongly recommend the adoption of recommendation 55 and its
application in Ukraine.
That services in the Crimea do not provide adequately for Crimean Tatar women, can also be
reflected in the low level of participation in decision making processes. Approximately only 5% of
elected positions in the Crimea are held by Crimean Tatars and there is only 1 Crimean Tatar
woman. This is actually pail of a decline in overall representation for Crimean Tatars, Thereford I
also strongly recommend the adoption of Recommendation 60 of the Forum
The situation of the Crimean Tatars is contrary to both the Constitution of Ukraine and
. International Human Rights standards to which Ukraine is a signatory. The legal status of the
Crimean Tatars in Ukraine is not defined yet, and therefore, Crimean Tatars are considered as
national minority under the Law on National Minorities of Ukraine. This law does not guarantee the
realization of the Crimean Tatar people rights, and specifies only some of the cultural and linguistic
rights, but not of political, economic and social rights. For example, according to the Article 47 of
the Constitution of Ukraine