Pravda
AP photo
Mikhail Gorbachev,
the first and the last president of the USSR, said that the proposition to bring
him to trial for the collapse of the Soviet Union was "utter nonsense." The
appeals to try Gorbachev for the break-up of the Soviet empire came from several
deputies of the State Duma. "These calls reflect only the desire of some
deputies to their personal PR," said Gorbachev.
"They like to know that
they are being talked-about. But the appeal is completely ill-conceived from the
standpoint of historical facts. If this is envy, then there is nothing to envy.
Deputies have many times raised the issue of raising the pension, at least to
the level of deputies, but the issue was not even discussed. I am obviously in
someone else's way, which can be evidenced by the fact that during the last 20
days several reports of my death have appeared. These people have no conscience.
I certainly do not react to such statements, so I do my business and my health,"
Interfax quoted Gorbachev as saying.
Mikhail Gorbachev advised one
should seriously analyze who at the Supreme Council of Russia voted for the
adoption of Belovezha Accords about the collapse of the USSR."
The idea
to bring Gorbachev to trial for the collapse of the USSR came from deputies of
United Russia party, Evgeny Fyodorov and Anton Romanov, communists Ivan
Nikitchuk and Oleg Denisenko and member of the Liberal Democratic Party, Mikhail
Degtyarev. They directed a deputy's request to Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika,
to conduct investigation into the events that occurred during the collapse of
the USSR.
They noted that Soviet citizens in a referendum voted to
preserve the unity of the state, but top Soviet leaders committed illegal acts
that caused the collapse of the country.
The MPs stressed that on
November 4, 1991, the department of supervision of the execution of laws of the
USSR initiated a case against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. However, the
decision to initiate the case was lifted the next day.
According to the
deputies, Gorbachev currently has no immunity against prosecution. To crown it
all, they believe that such crimes as the collapse of the state have no statute
of limitations.
Liberal Democrat Michael Degtyarev hopes that the
investigation may give the first-ever legal assessment of the events that
happened more than 20 years ago.
Evgeny Fyodorov, a
member of the State Duma Committee on Budget and Taxes, told Pravda.Ru, on what
grounds the idea to prosecute the actions of Mikhail Gorbachev appeared.
"It appeared in the light of the recent events in Ukraine - they are the
continuation of the events of 1991. An investigation like this would have led to
a legal confirmation of the fact of foreign intervention in 1991. It would
legally validate the fact that the method of this intervention was a coup
organized by Gorbachev.
"The materials that we sent to the investigating
authorities provide the facts of this nature. To put it in a nutshell, Mikhail
Gorbachev created an illegal authority (state council) for the elimination of
the USSR, which not only destroyed the USSR, but also abolished the Soviet
government, expelled several republics from the Soviet Union and so on.
"Gorbachev was deliberately destroying the bodies of state protection.
For example, the KGB was abolished by Gorbachev in advance not to interfere with
the elimination of the USSR. It was a thought-out policy. If we carry out the
necessary investigation, it would expose three of today's consequences of this
issue.
"First, we will evaluate the methods and technology of the fifth
column that carries a direct threat to Russian statehood - the technology and
methods have not changed in 23 years. The society will become aware of how these
methods work.
"Secondly, we will give an incentive to national liberation
movements throughout the former Soviet Union, particularly in Ukraine, where it
is these slogans that people follow in Kharkov, Lugansk, Donbass,
etc.
"This kind of investigative actions on the territory of Russia, the
conclusions of the investigation, will strengthen the national liberation
movement in Ukraine.
"Third, we will be able to assess the grounds of
today's statehood of all former Soviet republics, including Russia, in terms of
sovereignty. If the investigation confirms that this was a coup, then it would
mean that the foundations of statehood were not completely sovereign, that they
would require special procedures to strengthen sovereignty. This will
automatically improving the quality of living standards, including for the
citizens of the Russian Federation.
"There were anti-state crimes were
committed, and no one doubts that even in preliminary stages. Accordingly, they
need to be investigated. I'm sorry, but if someone steals a sack of potatoes,
they investigate it, and here the consequences are much more serious," said
Evgeny Fyodorov said.