Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 20 – The situation in Ingushetia which began with what appeared to be
a minor issue has grown in “unpredictable” ways into something “extremely
dangerous for the entire system of the government structure of Russia,
according to Aleksey Grishin, an influential specialist on Islam and head of
the Religion and Society Information and Analysis Center.
In
a two-part, 5,000-word article, he suggests that the Kremlin may decide to
sacrifice Yunus-Bek Yevkurov in order to regain the initiative and that such a
move could come with dramatic suddenness. But some in Moscow are worried about
the impact of that on other regions (islamio.ru/news/policy/ingushskiy_gambit_pozhertvuet_li_moskva_yu_evkurovym/ and islamio.ru/news/policy/ingushskiy_gambit_pozhertvuet_li_moskva_yu_evkurovym_2/).
Meanwhile, the crisis continued to
bubble in Ingushetia itself. Residents of the village of Ekazhevo held a
meeting at the mosque there to protest Chechen online taunts against Ingush
including suggestions that the latter are fit only to take out the Chechens’
trash (charter97.org/ru/news/2018/11/20/313490/,
mbk.news/news/v-ingushetii-proxodit/
and og.ru/society/2018/11/20/100534).
It appears that the residents of
that village and the elders of the dominant taip there worked to keep the situation
from getting out of hand after one Ingush man said he would go to Chechnya –
which he did – and challenge the Chechens to fight like men – which apparently
he was dissuaded from doing.
Other news from Ingushetia today
includes:
·
It
appears that the efforts of the Ingush authorities to prevent the subbotnik-demonstration on Saturday may
have prevented a major clash, as the Kavkaz-Uzel
news agency is now saying that some 600 heavily armed Chechens were nearby,
nominally to conduct an exercise but quite possibly to respond to any Ingush
moves to cross the new border (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328117/).
·
Lawyers
for the Amnesty International staffer who was detained by Ingush siloviki last
month say that officials are dragging their heels as far as the investigation
of that incident is concerned (kavkazr.com/a/29610514.html).
·
The
Russian government announced that it would not bring charges against Ingush
cellphone operators for turning off the network during the October protests in
Ingushetia (gazetaingush.ru/news/roskomnadzor-ne-budet-nakazyvat-operatorov-za-otklyuchenie-interneta-v-ingushetii).
·
A
young Ingush man telephoned the police there to say that he had planted a bomb
in an internet salon. The report turned out to be false but represents an
extension of the tactic some dissidents were using earlier this year elsewhere
in Russia (iz.ru/814391/2018-11-20/ingushskii-shkolnik-soobshchil-v-politciiu-o-minirovanii-salona-sviazi).
·
Preparations
for the November 27 demonstration are proceeding at full speed, organizers
say. They hope to turn out enough people
to have an impact on the Russian Constitutional Court which is hearing on that
date Yevkurov’s appeal concerning the border accord (club-rf.ru/06/news/52124).
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