Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

EDM: The Kremlin's Candidate for PACE's Presidency

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • EDM: The Kremlin's Candidate for PACE's Presidency

    Eurasia Daily Monitor

    October 11, 2007 -- Volume 4, Issue 188



    THE KREMLIN'S CANDIDATE FOR PACE'S PRESIDENCY

    by Vladimir Socor

    Mikhail Margelov, a politician close to the Kremlin and prominent in
    the United Russia party of power, seems set to take over the presidency of
    the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), the leading democracy
    and human-rights watchdog in Europe.

    An inside arrangement shepherded by the outgoing PACE chairman, Rene
    van der Linden, has reserved PACE's chair for Margelov for a two-year term
    starting in January 2008. The arrangement also rests on support from British
    Tories in the Strasbourg-based PACE, whether ignored or condoned by the
    Conservative Party leadership in Britain.

    The opening of PACE's autumn session this month has thrust this
    arrangement from backstage into the open. The Russian delegation's behavior
    early in this session reflects confidence that a Margelov presidency is
    irreversible. By the same token, the numerous opponents of a Margelov
    presidency at PACE seem scattered and demoralized. Such conclusions on
    either side are probably premature, however.

    The arrangement for a Kremlin-connected figure to supervise democracy
    in Europe is unprecedented in any institution anywhere. At PACE, it has
    emerged partly from the political designs of some individuals, partly from
    sheer bureaucratic momentum trumping democracy, and partly from Russian
    heavy-handed tactics, abetted passively by some West Europeans in the
    Strasbourg assembly.

    Although Margelov's party, United Russia, embodies the Kremlin's
    `managed democracy,' Margelov managed to become chairman of PACE's European
    Democrats' Group (EDG), a conservative caucus built by British Tories at
    PACE. The EDG's immediate past chairman, David Atkinson, helped arrange for
    Margelov to take over that post in 2005 on Atkinson's retirement. Moreover,
    ambitious to increase EDG's numerical weight relative to other caucuses in
    PACE, the Tories and a few others invited the Russian delegation to join EDG
    en masse. The well-disciplined United Russia duly allocated 27 members, out
    of PACE's 36 Russian members, to join EDG, thus becoming overnight the
    dominant force in this 91-member Conservative group. Tories, of whom there
    are only 11 in EDG, retain the posts of honorary chair, first-vice-chair,
    and political officer [whip] thanks to United Russia.

    Under PACE's rules, the political caucuses rotate in holding PACE's
    presidency at three-year intervals. Van der Linden held the presidency in
    2005-2007 on behalf of the European People's Party (an alliance mainly of
    Christian-Democrat parties). It is now EDG's turn, and with Margelov in
    control there, he is next in line for the PACE presidency on procedural
    grounds. Although Margelov and his United Russia are wide open to challenge
    on basic democracy criteria, van der Linden provided crucial help to arrange
    a smooth succession for Margelov as PACE president.

    Meanwhile, Russia is massively breaching the commitments it undertook
    to the Council of Europe in 1996 as conditions to Russia's membership. PACE'
    s monitoring mechanism has become chronically complacent on that account,
    and PACE's credibility eroded as a result. Its credibility could now suffer
    irreparable damage if PACE installs Russia, Europe's prime offender to PACE'
    s values, in this institution's presidency.

    The credibility issue would quickly come to the fore if Margelov and
    Konstantin Kosachev, the head of Russia's delegation to PACE, misuse this
    institution for propaganda against the Baltic states, Georgia, the United
    States, and U.S. allies The Russian delegation's conduct seems to reflect
    this intention since the opening of PACE's autumn session in the first week
    of October.

    Thus, Kosachev has called for:

    a) reintroducing PACE monitoring of Estonia and Latvia over `human
    rights violations';

    b) discussing on PACE's floor `political persecutions' in Georgia,
    based on former defense minister Irakli Okruashvili's imputations of
    criminal acts to President Mikheil Saakashvili (which Okruashvili failed to
    substantiate and then retracted entirely on October 8 -- see Rustavi-2 TV,
    Civil Georgia, October 8, 9);

    c) raising at PACE the issue of use of military force by the United
    States `and its allies'; and

    d) condemning the planned U.S. anti-missile defense installations in
    Poland and the Czech Republic.

    Kosachev is also a member of the Conservative EDG at PACE. Margelov
    and Kosachev are acting in concert in their twin capacities as chairmen of
    the Russian Duma and Federation Council committees on international affairs.

    Alone among the Council of Europe's 47 member countries, Russia has
    not ratified Protocol 14 to the European Human Rights Convention, thereby
    delaying by years the processing of Russian cases at the European Court on
    Human Rights (ECHR). Margelov and Kosachev claim that they personally favor
    Russian ratification, but since the Duma rejects it, they propose modifying
    the Protocol to facilitate Duma ratification. By this logic, the 46
    countries that did ratify the document would have to cancel their
    ratification and redraft a weaker document in line with Russia's goals at
    ECHR.

    Margelov has confirmed matter-of-factly to Russian media that Russia's
    presidential administration and Ministry of Foreign Affairs have authorized
    his candidacy to PACE's presidency (Moskovsky novosti, September 14).
    Margelov's admission reflects the absence of separation of powers in Russia.
    His full equanimity about this situation should instantly disqualify his
    candidacy to PACE's presidency. It would unthinkable for a legislator from a
    democratic country to depend on executive branch approval for seeking
    election to a parliamentary or inter-parliamentary post. However, Margelov's
    backers at PACE seem prepared to compromise the organization's standards for
    the Kremlin-authorized candidate.

    (Interfax, September 24 - October 9; Itar-Tass, October 1;
    Parlamentskaya gazeta, October 2)


    --Vladimir Socor
Working...
X