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Man Dies After Self-Immolation Protest Over Language Policies In Russia's Udmurtia

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The man has been identified as Albert Razin, an Udmurt activist. (file photo)
The man has been identified as Albert Razin, an Udmurt activist. (file photo)

IZHEVSK, Russia -- A 79-year-old man who lit himself on fire protesting against Russia's language policies in the capital of the Volga region of Udmurtia has died.

Media reports quoted medical personnel of a hospital in the city of Izhevsk as saying that the man was pronounced dead hours after hospitalization on September 10.

The man, named Albert Razin, was holding two signs reading "If my language dies tomorrow, then I'm ready to die today" and "Do I have a Fatherland?"

He was said to be in critical condition, with burns to nearly 100 percent of his body.

The Investigative Committee has launched an investigation, while the Udmurt State Council postponed its session following the incident, reports said.

The Udmurt State Council postponed its session following the incident, reports said.

Razin, a doctor in philosophy and an Udmurt activist, was among a group of local experts who had signed an open letter calling on the Udmurt parliament not to support the bill on the teaching of "native languages" in schools that has angered representatives of many of the country's ethnic minorities.

The bill, approved by Russia’s lower house of parliament, the State Duma, last year, canceled the mandatory teaching of indigenous languages in Russia's so-called ethnic regions and republics, where there is a relatively high proportion of non-Russian ethnic groups.

Responding to complaints from ethnic Russians living in these regions, President Vladimir Putin said in 2017 that children should not be compelled to study languages that are not their mother tongues.

Putin's directive effectively initiated an attack on minority languages in the regions' educational systems by federal prosecutors and, in fact, downgraded non-Russian languages in all spheres of public life to the extent many are now ignored and must fight to survive.

The bill is therefore considered in Russia's so-called ethnic regions, including Udmurtia, as an existential threat.

The Udmurt language is of the Uralic stem, which also includes Finno-Ugric languages. The number of people who speak the language has decreased from 463,000 in 2002 to 324,000 in 2010.

There are some 560,000 ethnic Udmurts living in Russia's Volga region, Kazakhstan, and Estonia.

The Udmurt community represents some 560,000 people living mostly in the Volga region, Kazakhstan, and Estonia.

Russia has signed but refused to ratify the Council of Europe's European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. The 1992 document has been ratified by 25 European countries.

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