Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 10 – In yet
another indication that what some are already calling “a Third Chechen War” is
about to begin (www.ng.ru/regions/2012-10-10/3_kartblansh.html),
Moscow appears about to complete the expulsion of ethnic Laks from a Daghestani
region into which they had moved following deportation of the Chechens who had
been living there in 1944.
In a letter to Prime Minister Dmitry
Medvedev, Accounting Chamber head Sergey Stepashin called for Moscow to
allocate an additional 6.6 billion rubles (200 million US dollars) to complete
the resettlement of the Laks lest their presence spark new inter-ethnic
conflicts in the region, according to an article in today’s “Izvestiya” (izvestia.ru/news/537293).
The
Republic of Daghestan has had a program to resettle the Laks from this region since
the mid-1990s, and Stepashin is only urging that Moscow provide more funds to
complete the effort. But the reluctance of the Laks to leave, past clashes
between them and the Chechens, and the echoes such population shifts have with
past deportations make this an extremely sensitive issue.
Stepashin
told Medvedev that Moscow should fund the resettlement program through its
South of Russia effort. He said the money was needed to build 788 new homes of
a total area of 49,800 square meters and to construct infrastructure for the
currently unpopulated area to which the Laks are to be moved.
Daghestani officials agree with Stepashin, “Izvestiya”
reported. They had hoped to resettle all
of the 170,000 Laks in an area near Makhachkala much earlier. But because they
have lacked the money to do so, they have kept delaying the planned date of
completion. And because there are ever more Laks, the price tag for moving them
continues to rise.
Gasan
Akayev, the head of the Daghestani government agency for resettlement and the
rehabilitatioin of repressed people, said the program and its delays have
generated resentment. “People are dissatisfied. How long should they continue
to sit on their suitcases?” And that sparks tensions between the two peoples.
The
republic nationalities ministry has tried to maintain “inter-ethnic peace” in
the Novolak district, “Izvestiya” reports. “But it hasn’t always been able to
do so.” Last spring, republic law enforcement offiers “were able to prevent a
mass fight of Laks and Chechens,” but only just because “Chechens arrived from
neighboring regions of Daghestan for the fight.
The expert community agrees,
the Moscow paper continued Aleksey Malashenko of the Moscow Carnegie Center
said that if the situation deteriorates on the Chechen-Ingush border, that
could hit the Novolak district “a a ricochet.” So far things are “under
control,” but that may not last as there are Laks on one side of the street and
Chechens on the other.But Sergey Markedonov, a Russian ethnic affairs specialist now at CSIS in Washington, said that even though there are problems in that Daghestani region, no one should rush in to change things. Because there are multiple conflicts: “between Chechens and Laks, Chechens and Avars, and Laks and Kumyks.” Taking any radical step could quickly lead to a loss of control.
As “Ivzestiya” notes, the Novolak district “was formed on the basis of the Aukhov district in 1944 after the deportation of the Chechens and Ingushes to Cenntral Asia.” A decade later, members of these two groups returned but found that Laks had settled in what had been Chechen areas.
“Over the last 20 years,” the paper continues, “the number of Chechens in the Novolak region has constantly increased, but that of the Laks to the contrary has fallen. As a result, a deision was taken to reestablish the Aukhov region and resettle the Laks near Makhachkala.” But obviously, the Laks aren’t eager to go unless they are given housing and jobs in a new place
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