Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 27 – The Russian Constitutional Court, which is located in St.
Petersburg where Ingush opponents of the border accord protested yesterday with
some detained and beaten, held an open session on Yunus-Bek Yevkurov’s appeal
to have Moscow declare that accord and the way in which he organized its ratification
completely legal.
Representatives
of the Russian government said that that court had the exclusive right to hear
such a case and that its ruling would be final.
But opponents of the accord, some of whom spoke and others of whom were
excluded from the courtroom and kept from speaking, remained vehemently opposed.
The
court for its part declared that a one-day hearing was sufficient and said that
it would hold discussions and issue its findings at some point in the near
future (kommersant.ru/doc/3813014,rbc.ru/politics/27/11/2018/5bfd31379a79475d8418be22?from=main,
and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328419/).
Meanwhile, in Nazran, Ingush
opponents of the border accord staged a mass meeting at which they demanded not
only that the border agreement with Chechnya be held invalid but that the
border dispute with North Ossetia be revisited with the Prigorodny district
being returned to them and Yevkurov being removed from office.
The meeting was peaceful but was
surrounded the entire time by a large number of siloviki (caucasustimes.com/ru/miting-v-ingushetii-ot-evkurova-do-prigorodnogo-rajona/, graniru.org/Politics/Russia/activism/m.273993.html,
kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328432/, kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328427/, kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328428/
and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328437/).
Meanwhile,
there were three other important developments over the last 24 hours related to
the border dispute:
·
The Congress of Chechens of Daghestan
held a meeting at which it did not criticize Makhachkala but suggested that
there should be moves toward the formation of a single North Caucasus federal
subject within the Russian Federation (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328409/).
·
A
Magas court has imposed a draconian
sentence on an Ingush opposition figure for supposedly illegally possessing
weapons, an indication of what Yevkurov and Moscow may be planning for other
opposition figures there in the future (kavkazr.com/a/29624135.html).
·
Barakh
Chemurziyev, a leader of the Support for Ingushetia opposition movement, says
that Yevkurov will be better off if the Russian court rules against what he has
done and that it is entirely possible that Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov, not
anticipating such a reaction to the September 26 agreement, may wish that it
had never happened and that it would just all go away (gorod-812.ru/ingushskiy-narod-otstupat-ne-budet-evkurovu-luchshe-proigrat-v-ks-rossii/).
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