Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 23 – Because of
its earlier bitter experience, Moscow’s policy in the North Caucasus over the
last decade has been to use subsidies and force to make sure that ethnic and
religious conflicts do not break out in the region since setting the North
Caucasus ablaze is easy – there is a lot of “dry tinder” around – but putting
out the conflagration is hard.
That
makes some of Moscow’s recent actions, including both intentional moves and
failures, surprising and has led some to ask this week “why did the powers that
be allow the outburst of the Kabardino-Balkar conflict?” (onkavkaz.com/news/2403-v-kbr-promorgali-konflikt-pochemu-vlasti-dopustili-vspyshku-kabardino-balkarskogo-protivostojan.html).
According to
OnKavkaz journalist Zarema Khasanova, “the entire Caucasus for several days has
been attentively following the events in the village of Kyodelen of the Elbrus
district of Kabardino-Balkaria.” She
asked two specialists, Vladimir Kudayev of the Republic-Common Affair community
and Kantemir Khurtayev, head of the All-Russian Inter-Ethnic Movement of Youth,
for the reasons why this clash happened and why officials allowed it to.
Kudayev said that the clashes did
not arise suddenly or because of the commemoratino of the Kanzhal battle. The
real causes are a longstanding complaint by the Balkars about Karachay use of
their historical lands and because many Balkars think that the whole issue of
the battle has been invented by the Karachays to subordinate the Balkars.
Khurtayev said that “the Balkars
consider the action not as a cultural one but as a political one, the goal of
which is the symbolic marking of territories on which they live” by invoking a
long ago battle to claim that these lands have somehow always been Karachay
rather than Balkars despite the fact that the Balkars have been there at least
as long.
Officials
intervened only after the first clashes, Khurtayev continued, and after two
days, the fighting quieted down. “At present, the situation has stabilized,”
with the participants in the clashes returning to their homes. According to him, “the law enforcement organs
and republic authorities performed effectively.”
Kudayev
for his part suggested that “there always will be forces interested in specific
outbursts in the population and this card will be played quite often.” And that
is possible because “the authorities are incapable or do not want to regulate such
clashes” instead of addressing the issues behind them and removing them.
Khurayev
agreed. He said that he is “deeply convinced that this was an artificially
provoked conflict,” intended either to destabilize the republic or to put a
black mark against republic head Yury Kokov who will be up for possible
reappointment next year. If there are
problems, he might not be.
Kudayev,
in contrast, suggested that the powers that be were happy enough to allow the
conflict to occur to distract the attention of people from current problems and
especially the shortcomings in the work of local and regional officials. The
authorities have not spoken out about the conflict, but neither have the
national movements of either side.
“The
population of the republic on the whole understands,” he continued, “that
Kabardins and Balkars are fated to live together, that there are no
alternatives to that;” but there are always some who think otherwise and they
can spark conflicts. The authorities
could help by promoting discussions involving representatives of both nations.
Indeed,
Kudayev argued, the authorities have a definite self-interest in doing so lest
these conflicts grow in number and spread to a larger share of the population.
But at present, they are not capable of doing so; and they think that police
power is enough. After all, Kokov, a former policeman, has surrounded himself
with officials, 80 percent of whom have the same origin.
And
Khutayev for his part said that the current developments are worrisome because
Kabardino-Balkaria had remained relatively calm in the tense 1990s but now “suddenly
has begun” to fracture along ethnic lines.
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