Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 22 – It is becoming increasingly obvious that however the Russian
Constitutional Court rules on Yunus-Bek Yevkurov’s appeal of a decision by his
republic’s constitutional court against the procedures he used to ratify his
border accord with Chechnya, the crisis is not going to go away and may even
escalate.
If
the court rules against Yevkurov, that decision will enflame Ramzan Kadyrov and
other Chechens and they will likely try to enforce their point of view by
physically taking full control of the area Yevkurov agreed on September 26 to
transfer to them (caucasustimes.com/ru/chechency-i-ingushi-popali-v-lovushku/).
But if the court
rules for Yevkurov, Ingush activists say they will not only renew their public
protests against the border accord but also raise the issue of Ingushetia’s
border with North Ossetia in the Prigorodny district which the two republics engaged
in bloody battles in 1992 that cost almost 600 lives. (On it, see warandpeace.ru/ru/commentaries/view/29276/.)
That threat was made at a press
conference in Manas today by members of the Ingush Committee of National Unity
which was behind the earlier demonstrations and the convention of the World
Congress of the Ingush People (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328208/, kavkazr.com/a/29613425.html and kavkaz-uzel.eu/blogs/378/posts/35432).
Meanwhile,
there were three other important developments in or linked to the
Ingush-Chechen dispute:
·
Chechnya’s Kadyrov is picking up
support on the issue of the border with Ingushetia not only among people in the
republic which he controls with an iron hand but also among members of the
Chechen diaspora in Europe, many of whom now live there because they are
opponents of the Chechen strongman (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/326652/).
·
Chechens
are complaining that a public scandal arising from a war of words between a
Chechen official responsible for hunting and an Ingush taip leader are “destructive”
and can “only worsen relations between the two peoples” (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328216/).
·
And
inspired by Ingush activists, Circassians are stepping up their efforts to
defend their nation, gathering more signatures in a petition calling for the division
of Karachay-Cherkessia where they are an oppressed minority (kavkazr.com/a/29614575.html), protesting against a
Russian government move to strip a Circassian repatriant of Russian citizenship
(circassianprogress-rus.blogspot.com/2018/11/blog-post_21.html),
and organizing a new online community to promote a common Circassian national
movement (circassianprogress-rus.blogspot.com/2018/11/blog-post_16.html).
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