Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 2 – Ramzan Kadyrov
will certainly attract more media attention with his call for removing Lenin’s
body from the mausoleum, but the Chechen leader may now be taking a position
that will be far more consequential for the future of the Russian Federation –
serving as de facto ombudsman for people from the Caucasus facing
discrimination there.
Following an act of violence in
Surgut in the Khanty-Mansiisk Autonomous District in August, an act that
officials characterized as terrorism, sports clubs and other institutions in
that oil-rich region in the Russian north have openly discriminated against
people from the Caucasus, according to the leaders of the Chechen, Ingush, Daghestani
and Azerbaijani diasporas there.
(These groups have become especially
prominent there as regional oil fields have developed largely because there is
a tradition of working in oil and gas production in these three republics that
extends back into Soviet times.)
Bislan Makhmudov, a Waynakh
community leader there, says that discrimination against people “with a
non-Slavic appearance” has intensified over the last few months, and now the
Caucasians in the district believe they have no choice but to appeal to
Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov to intervene and correct the situation (ura.news/articles/1036272798).
That such groups think in these terms suggests that the relationship between diasporas and the leaders of the republics from which they come may be changing rapidly, something that could create administrative problems for more than just officials in the Khanty-Mansiisk region.
Makhmudov says
that sports facilities have refused to allow his son, a boxer, to enter. “In
general, he doesn’t look like a Caucasians,” the community leader said, but
when they found out his nationality, they immediately banned him. We aren’t the
Chechens of earlier years. We should not be associated with terrorists,
criminals or bandits.”
He reports that
the leaders of the Daghestani and Azerbaijani diasporas in Surgut have
experienced that they have conclude that they have no choice but to ask Kadyrov
to get involved and defend their rights.
The sports clubs deny they are
discriminating and suggest they are simply being careful as local officials
have advised them to be. One suggested that Makhmudov’s son wasn’t kept from
using their facilities because of his ethnic background but rather because he
supposedly showed “aggression” to people at the desk.
The role of local officials is
murky. They deny promoting discrimination; but the URA news agency, in its
report, shows a screen shot which suggests that is exactly what they are doing
at least by encouraging “vigilance” against outsiders. Officials have been reluctant to comment, but
one says no one has ordered anyone to discriminate on the basis of ethnicity or
appearance.
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