Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 1 – The Russian
siloviki by their arbitrary violence and obvious covering up of their own
criminal acts are helping to radicalize young people in the North Caucasus and
making the latter easy targets for recruitment by ISIS, according to rights
activists from the region at a recent roundtable organized by Memorial and “Novaya
gazeta.”
Oleg Orlov, the head of Memorial’s “hot
spots” program, said that the actions of the Russian forces in the North
Caucasus were radicalizing people there not only by arbitrary acitons but also
by creating an unjust totalitarian state to counter another one, “a cure,” he
said, that “is no better than the ‘disease’” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=57739E366718F).
Murad Magomedov, a Memorial lawyer
in Daghestan, agreed, saying that putting people there on terrorist watch lists
not only is illegal and arbitrary but is radicalizing young people and has
convinced many Islamist radicals that they are doing exactly the right thing by
provoking the Russian authorities to act as they are.
Valery Khatazhukov, head of the
Kabardino-Balkar Human Rights Defense Center, said that the actions of Russian
siloviki are pushing young people into the underground, exactly the opposite
result that Moscow says its forces are interested in.
Irina Gordienko, a “Novaya gazeta”
journalist, added that among the greatest victims of Russian siloviki tactics
are women who are driven into the underground or even to the Middle East and
then prevented from being able to return or put their children in schools. Some
are driven out of their homes at the insistence of the Russian siloviki.
But if anything, the report of
Magomed Mutsolgov, the head of Ingushetia’s Mashr Human Rights Organization,
provided the most damning report. He suggested that Russian siloviki are behind
much of the wave of kidnappings and disappearances in the region and that their
culpability is hidden by officials who refuse to investigate even when there is
evidence.
This is creating among young people a
powerful feeling of injustice, he says, and as a result, “they are becoming
more radical.” Along with the absence of
any social prospects, injustice plays a key role in “pushing young people” in
that direction, again whatever Russian officials say.
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