Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 17 – Declaring that staying in the Magas square any longer would be
counterproductive, the leaders of the Ingush protest against the border accord
with Chechnya sent their people home after the square was cleaned up and
promising to resume protests on October 31 when a Congress of the Ingush People
will be convened.
They
appear to have taken this decision for two reasons. On the one hand, the
republic government’s authorization for protest meetings ended today; and on
the other, the authorities agreed to allow new protests from October 31 through
November 2 (kavkazr.com/a/kartina-dnya-17-october/29548977.html and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326778/).
There thus appears to have been some behind
the scenes contacts between the protesters and the government of Yunus-Bek
Yevkurov, which also resulted in a declaration by the republic interior
ministry that it would not disperse the demonstrators by force and denounced as
false reports that its officers would stand aside to allow outside siloviki
units to do that.
When the protests resume on October 31,
demonstration leaders said they would begin by honoring the victims of the Ossetian-Ingush
conflict, something that will further inflame public opinion among the Ingush (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326792/).
Meanwhile, both Yevkurov and Chechnya’s
Ramzan Kadyrov refused to meet protester demands that the border accord they
signed at the end of September be annulled or at least subject to a referendum
as the constitutions of their republics and Russian law requires.
Yevkurvo said that the agreement on the border
had been required so as to avoid any violent conflict between the two republics
(newsru.com/russia/17oct2018/checheningush.html),
and Kadyrov, in excelsis, said the border accord was now in force and that he
had directed his government to build a road up to the new border (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326768/).
Political analysts said that Yevkurov’s
conversation with Vladimir Putin had not clarified the Kremlin’s position but
rather highlighted divisions in Moscow over what to do (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326793/),
while legal specialists argued that the Russian Federation Council has no role
in approving the measure (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326774/ and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326779/).
Even with this time out, it remains unclear
what will happen next, either in the two weeks before the protests are slated
to resume or after that time. As one
close observer of the region, Natalya Zubarevich of Moscow State University put
it, there is today no obvious compromise that Yevkurov and the protesters could
both accept.
That suggests that there still ay be only
two means of resolving the dispute – either with extensive talks “or with tanks”
(nazaccent.ru/content/28432-eto-ne-shou.html).
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