Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 19 – The shooting
that claimed five lives at a Russian Orthodox Church in Kizlyar yesterday
represents a dangerous new escalation in Daghestan. For the first time, an
Islamist radical there has attacked ethnic Russians as a group, an apparent
protest against the new Russian governor intended to get Russians to flee from
the North Caucasus.
Magomed Shamkhalov, a commentator
for the OnKavkaz portal, says that “the cynical attack” likely was organized by
“forces which have lost access” to stealing form the budget and thus is
understand by Daghestanis as “an attack against Vladimir Vasiliyev, Putin’s new
man in Makhachkala (onkavkaz.com/news/2121-krovavoe-voskresene-kizljara-boeviki-dagestana-nikogda-ne-ubivali-russkih-javnyi-udar-po-vasile.html).
The shooter, identified as
22-year-old Khalil Khalilov, used a hunting rifle and killed five women as well
as wounding others. He comes from a
predominantly non-Russian region not far from Kizlyar, a city which still has
an ethnic Russian majority and in which up to now ethnic Russians have felt
more or less at home.
Daghestani bloggers suggest, and
Shamkhalov agrees, that the attack probably was not orchestrated by radical
Islamists as many in Moscow appear to believe but rather by “influential forces
who with the arrival of Vasiliya … have lost their access to the budget of the
republic to which they had been accustomed for the last quarter of a century.”
But however that may be, others see
the attack as directed at the ethnic Russians of the North Caucasus as a group with
the intention of the attacker being to spread fear among Russians and thus lead
even more of them to flee the predominantly Muslim region than have in the past
deacades.
In an article in Komsomolskaya Pravda today, Dmitry
Steshin, the Moscow paper’s special correspondent for the region, argues that “only
churches are holding the last Russians in the Caucasus” and that this attack
will reduce the possibility that they will be able to continue to do so (kp.ru/daily/26796/3831461/).
And still others argue that this attack
means that Orthodox churches are not the targets of Islamist terrorists more generally,
a conclusion that if true will only push the Moscow Patriarchate and the church
establishment into an even more hostile position relative to the Muslim population
of the Russian Federation.
Roman Silantyev, a specialist on
Islam with close ties to both the Patriarchate and the Russian government,
tells the Nakanune news agency that Sunday’s shooting demonstrates that
Orthodox churches not only in the North Caucasus but elsewhere are now “in the zone
of risk” and could be attacked by ISIS at any time (nakanune.ru/articles/113711/).
He too points out that this attack
on a Russian church is something unprecedented in Daghestan. “Before this,”
Silantyev says, “terrorists attacked all people not making any distinction
between Orthodox Christians and Muslims … There were several churches which
received threats but they weren’t attacked.” Now the situation appears to have changed.
Defending against lone wolf
militants is extremely difficult, Silantyev says; and in his view, there is
only one way to proceed: to hunt down and arrest as many Wahhabis as possible: “the
fewer Wahhabis there are in Russia, the less the risk” of a terrorist
attack. If there were no Wahhabis in
Russia, he argues, there would not be any terrorist attacks.
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