Russerne vil åpenbart ha suverenitet over visse områder på øygruppen. De ser åpenbart etter andre fokuspunkter enn Ukraina, men de bruker viktigheten av militær erfaring derfra som et moment for å håndheve egne regler på Svalbard (Red.)
Trust Arktikugol
represents Russian interests in Svalbard. The company also ran the coal mine in
Pyramiden until it closed in 1998. Photo: Atle Staalesen
Deputy Prime Minister
sends warning to Oslo: Russian rights at Svalbard must not be challenged
"Today, our warriors are spilling blood for
the sovereignty of our country and the rights of people to speak the Russian
language," Yuri Trutnev said in a government commission meeting devoted to
the situation on the Norwegian Arctic archipelago.
By
February 13, 2024
The Russian deputy prime minister in charge
of Far Eastern and Arctic affairs on the 13th of February sent a thinly veiled
threat to Norway for its management of the Svalbard archipelago.
In a meeting in the so-called Government
Commission on the Protection of Russian Presence at Spitsbergen, Trutnev
signalled that Russian rights in the Norwegian archipelago are under pressure.
“None of the rights and benefits acquired by
Russia can be reduced or infringed. We do not have the right to move even a
single step backwards,” he underlined in an opening remark.
With reference to the war in Ukraine, he
added that “warriors are today spilling blood for the sovereignty of our
country and the rights of people to speak the Russian language.”
As if comparing the situation in Svalbard
with Eastern Ukraine, the deputy PM argued that it is all a question of
‘sovereignty.’
Yuri Trutnev is Deputy Prime Minister of Russia. Photo: Atle Staalesen
“I think that we should address the work
here in Government the same way, that the work here is also a fight for our
sovereignty, a fight for the rights of Russia and Russians,” he told the
Commission members.
Trutnev also slashed the role of
international cooperation.
“I believe that everyone present understands
well that now is not the best time for development of international
cooperation. Probably, humankind is entering a phase of deepened conflict.”
In the meeting were more than 20 of the
member of the commission, among them Ildar Neverov, leader of state-owned
company Arktikugol.
In May 2023, Neverov and his Arktikugol
together with the local Russian General Consulate, organised militaristic
parades in the settlements of Barentsburg and Pyramiden.
In Pyramiden, the parade included a tractor
and excavator decorated with the flag of the so-called
Donetsk People’s Republic.
Later that same year, Neverov invited Bishop
Iakov, the hardline Russian churchman, and set up a major Orthodox cross
in the hill over Pyramiden without requesting permission from Norwegian
authorities.
Trust Arktikugol is the company that
operates the local coal mine in Barentsburg and manages the settlement and its
about 400 inhabitants.
Since he was appointed head of Trust
Arktikugol in 2022, Neverov has significantly stirred relations with Norway and
its Svalbard Governor.
The more assertive approach of Neverov and
his team coincided with transfer of the Trust Arktikugol to the Ministry
of the Far East and Arctic.
It is far from the first time that Russia
threatens Norway over its Svalbard policy. The far northern archipelago has
repeatedly been in the spotlight of Moscow hardliners and in connection with
the 100-year’s anniversary of the Svalbard Treaty in 2020, Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov insisted that Oslo engages in
“bilateral consultations” over the management of the islands. The
rejection of the Norwegian government was followed by a targeted
information offensive from Moscow.
In what appeared as an organized and
coordinated campaign, a number of state-affiliated Russian newspapers and media
companies published series of stories that expressed a highly negative, partly
aggressive, attitude towards the authorities in Oslo. The message was that
Norway must comply with Russian demands in Svalbard and that continued
opposition could have serious consequences.
Norway has full sovereignty over the
archipelago in accordance with the Svalbard Treaty of 1920, and individuals and
companies from signatory states are allowed to engage in economic activity.
Russians have since the 1930s run coal mines in the area.
The meeting in the Russian Spitsbergen
Commission took place only few days after Trutnev welcomed to his office a group
of warriors that had fought in Ukraine. Among the men
were several members of Spetsnaz intelligence units.
Reportedly, among the men were employees of
the Ministry of the Far East and Arctic that had volunteered for fighting on
the occupied lands.
“We will continue to use their experience
that now not only includes civilian and military service, but also real battle
experiences, for the development of the Far East and Arctic,” Minister of the
Arctic Aleksei Chekunkov said.
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