Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 18 – The Kremlin’s
decision to hold governors responsible for ethnic peace on their territories is
having an unintended consequence: some groups, including those who want the
construction of mosques, are insisting that governors agree to their demands or
face the kind of mass protests that could cost the governors their career.
“Muftis,” “NG-Religii” reports, “are
exploiting the main fear of bureaucrats – the fear of mass disorders and a
tolerant legal regime in which mass public religious services even when they
are unsanctioned are not prosecuted, in contrast to the situation with regard
to political meetings” (ng.ru/editorial/2013-08-15/2_red.html).
In Stavropol and Khabarovsk, Muslim
religious leaders have said they will hold such services, which officials fear
could lead to ethnic clashes, unless and until they are given permission to
build mosques, a step many non-Muslims oppose but that the authorities are now
afraid to oppose, even if the Muslim leaders are violating the law in other
ways.
Since spring, Stavropol Mufti
Mukhammad Rakhimov has unsuccessfully sought to obtain a plot of land for a new
mosque, but the regional authorities have turned him down because over the last
two years, eight mosques have been constructed in the kray, and the local
population does not want any more.
To get around that obstacle, the
Muslims had a local businessman buy the land they wanted and began building a
mosque. When the authorities intervened and said it was illegal and would have
to be torn down, the mufti replied that he would hold mass public prayers at
the site, something the authorities did not want.
“To the legal demands of the local authorities,”
“NG-Religii” continues, “the muftiat responded with blackmail,” threatening
career-killing disorders “of a religious character” between the authorities and
the local diasporas.
Mufti Rakhimov has promised to hold
a mass prayer in the central square of Pyatigorsk on September 20 “before the
residence of the presidential plenipotentiary to the North Caucasus Federal
District,” a location that would guarantee exactly the kind of high-level
attention to conflicts between officials and the population that the officials
cannot afford.
After Muslims in Kislovodsk threatened
to use the same tactic and despite the fact that 92.5 percent of that city’s
residents are against a new mosque there, “the local authorities hurried to agree
to a project for the construction of a Cathedral Mosque in the center of the
city and ‘think over’ the lifting of the judicial decision calling for tearing
down” another mosque.
This political strategy is now being
applied in other regions and with apparent success, the Moscow journal says.
After Muslims staged public prayers in Khabarovsk, the kray and city officials
ended their opposition to the construction of a mosque and have given
assurances that they will support a new Muslim religious center.
“Such cases already can be
considered a trend,” the Moscow journal continues, the result of the Kremlin’s
decision to hold local officials responsible for inter-ethnic peace and the
conclusion of the local officials that they are better off in career terms to
agree to the construction of new mosques than to risk the consequences of large
public demonstrations.
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