BRUSSELS,
November 11 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The conflict in Chechnya
is not just about terrorism and a political solution must be found to
secure peace, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Monday,
November 11, after an EU-Russia summit.
"The
conflict in Chechnya cannot be regarded only as a terrorist
problem," said Rasmussen, whose country holds the rotating
presidency of the European Union, after one-day talks with Russian
President Vladimir Putin, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"A
political solution is the only way to a lasting peace," Rasmussen
added.
Putin,
for his part, said Russia did not oppose a political process. However,
he ruled out talks with Chechnya's elected President Aslan Maskhadov,
whom the Russian leader branded a "murderer", following last
month's theater hostage crisis in Moscow.
Putin,
speaking after agreeing to an anti-terrorism "action plan"
with the EU, said the separatist movement in Muslim-majority Chechnya
"had been transformed into extremism and religious
radicalism".
"Russia
is not only fighting against terrorism in Chechnya but against
international terrorism," he said.
"If
we give just one chance to people who take hostages under any pretext,
then we would have repetitions of this not only in Moscow or Washington
or Bali, but in very many places all over the world," Putin said.
"If
these so-called freedom fighters want to terrorize us by threatening to
capture our nuclear facilities or other dangerous places, either we
stand together in fighting such threats or we are in big trouble."
Earlier
Monday, Putin's special advisor on Chechnya, Sergei Yastrzhembsky,
repeated Maskhadov was no longer a "legitimate partner" for
Russia in peace talks after Moscow accused him of being behind the
October 23-26 theatre hostage-taking.
Rasmussen,
however, reiterated the EU's call for human rights to be respected in
Chechnya, where allegations of atrocities by Russian troops are rife.
"Both
sides must respect human rights, and those who don't (must) be brought
to trial without delay," the Danish Premier said.
"The
international community must be allowed to help the innocents caught in
the conflict. Humanitarian assistance must be allowed into Chechnya to
reach those in need," he said.
The
summit was originally to have taken place in Copenhagen, but was moved
to Brussels at the last minute after Danish authorities refused to ban a
Chechen conference which took place in the days after the Moscow theater
siege.
Rasmussen
reiterated that Denmark's constitution guaranteed freedom of speech and
of assembly, and said "we regret that the Russian government put
demands to us which were legally impossible to meet".
A
diplomat said the debate on Chechnya between the Russian and Danish
leaders had been "businesslike, not emotional".
Outside
the summit, about 100 demonstrators chanted anti-Russian slogans and
also took their cause to the European Parliament nearby.
In
an open message to EU leaders, the organizers of the small protest said
the Chechnya conflict had become as tragic and dangerous as the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
"Peace
and a settlement in the Caucasus deserve the same attention as
restoration of peace in Palestine," it said