Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 29 – Whatever decision the Russian Constitutional Court takes on Yunus-Bek
Yevkurov’s appeal of the republic court’s ruling against his border agreement
with Chechnya and the process he used to ratify it, it will profoundly affect
relations between Ingush and Chechens, among non-Russians and between them and
Moscow across the country.
That
is the judgment of lawyers and participants in the process. Regardless of the
decision, relations between Ingush and Chechens and between Ingushetia and
Moscow will never be the same again, they say; and relations among other
non-Russians and their ties with Moscow will change as well (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328506/).
(Many analysts in the course of the conflict
over the border accord have in fact suggested that Moscow is behind the entire
conflict in order to split these two peoples, but that argument is difficult to
sustain given that the conflict and the prospects of a Moscow decision are
already affecting the attitudes of other non-Russians.)
At the strictly legal level, of
course, the decision of the Russian Constitutional Court will not have
precedential value. Russian courts in general do not follow precedents in the same
way most Western courts do. But that doesn’t mean that what happens in this
case will not affect others, prompting them to act in ways that reflect their
understanding of what is legally possible.
One indication of this is already obvious:
ethnic Chechens in Daghestan have been pressing for greater official recognition
in the wake of the Ingush-Chechen border accord and the protests about it. They
clearly believe that now is the time to demand either their own territory within
Daghestan or union with Chechnya (kavkazr.com/a/29623479.html).
There are several dozen groups
across the Russian Federation who are watching and calculating what they can do
and even more what they will be able to achieve in the wake of Moscow’s obvious
tilt toward Chechnya. If Moscow does complete its tilt toward Chechnya, that
won’t still these demands but intensify them, a development the Kremlin must be
worried about.
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