Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 19 – The Chechen
parliament yesterday restored two districts that had been suppressed by the
Soviets in 1944 after the deportation of Chechens to Central Asia and whose
territories, although not subseuquently given their old official status, were
largely off limits to Chechens who returned from exile later.
The re-establishment of the Cheberloy
and Galanchozh rayons brings the number of districts in that republic to 17
and, in the view of many local residents represents “the restoration of
historical justice,” according to a report on the Kavkaz-uzel.ru news portal (www.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/214340/).
But while that is undoubtedly true,
this Chechen step is lightly to spark demands by other victims of the Soviet
deportation for the restoration of other districts suppressed by Moscow in 1944.
And because of the close linkage between official territories, property, and
ethnicity, this Chechen move is likely to exacerbate tensions across the North
Caucasus.
The two “new-old” districts were set
up in 1925. After they were disbanded, the Cheberloy district was transferred
to Daghestan where it became part of that republic’s Botlikh district. Then, in
1957, its territory was shifted back to Daghestan where it was divided between the
Shatoy and Itum-Kalin districts.
The Galanchozh district, the
Kavkaz-uzel.ru portal notes, includes the village of Yalkhor whose most famous
son was Chechen-Ichkeria President Dzhokhar Dudayev. “Local residents,” it
continues, “received the news about the restoration of these earlier suppressed
districts, but observers are talking about the troubles which will be connected
with this.”
One of the residents, identified as
Isa T., said that after returning from deportation in 1957, “his parents
attempted to return to the place of their former residence, but they like other
residents of the [two now restored] districts were prohibited from settling in
these locations.” In fact, these districts were practically closed” altogether.
This appears to have been connected,
he added with the fact that “the Soviet leadership was concerned that there
would again appear in the mountains dissatisfied people who with arms in their
hands would oppose the power that be.”
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