Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 27 – Residents of the Ingush village of Karabulak voted unanimously
against the border accord Yunus-Bek Yevkurov signed with Chechnya’s Ramzan
Kadyrov at the end of September, yet another indication that this issue isn’t
going away and that when protests resume next week, they may be as large or larger
than before (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/327194/).
That
suggests the Yevkurov’s efforts to win over the population are failing; and it
also highlights the way in which visits to Ingushetia in recent days by Ramzan
Kadyrov and other Chechen officials are not calming the situation but instead
raising tensions still further (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/327186/, kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/327192/ and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/327187/).
Ingush
activists and ordinary residents appear to be offended by the imperial way in
which Kadyrov behaves, with enormous lines of cars and his obvious assumption
that he has the complete right to come and lecture them on why they should give
Chechnya far more land -- by some estimates, 27 times as much as Chechnya is
giving to their republic.
Meanwhile, two other nearby border
disputes continue to bubble. In Daghestan, leaders of the Chechen-Akintsy say
that they are not interested in having their region become part of Chechnya.
That would reduce the status of Chechens who live in other areas of the
republic by inflaming opinion against them (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/327202/).
But they do say there is one
condition that must be met for them to want to remain in Daghestan: Makhachkala
must restore their territorial autonomy, something they have long demanded,
that has sometimes been promised, but that as of now remains unfulfilled. If it
isn’t done now, they tell Kavkaz-Uzel, they may change their mind on changing
the border.
And in Stavropol Kray, disputes have
broken out among various Cossack groups over the demand of some of them to seek
the return of territory now within the borders of Chechnya to Stavropol and to
Cossack control. Some Cossacks favor that idea; others don’t, with the roots of
the dispute going back decades (newstracker.ru/article/general/27-10-2018/kazaki-protiv-kazakov-chem-zakonchitsya-peredel-granits-na-severnom-kavkaze
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