Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 23 – A Russian
military operation on the disputed Ingush-Chechen border has at least three purposes,
even though some Russian officials and military specialists deny each and every
one of them and claim that it is merely a coincidence that a Russian
counter-terrorist training session is occurring along the border of the two
republics.
The first, Ingush activists suggest,
is to deny Ingush access to disputed territories under the pretext that a
military operation is occurring there. The second, they say, is to remind
people in both republics that Moscow is in charge. And the third is to be in a
position to separate the two should that be necessary (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328244/
and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328220/).
These reactions come only a day
after it was first reported that Russian forces had cordoned off an area about
the village of Dattyk. Now, it appears, these forces have created a much larger
exclusion zone and are doing it in a way intended to attract attention rather
than being plausibly deniable.
Other developments over the last 24
hours in the border conflict include:
·
Ingush
courts have released or cancelled fines for some but not all of those charged
earlier in connection with demonstrations against the border accord (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/328242/
and kavkazr.com/a/29615037.html).
·
Caucasus
expert Anton Chablin says that Moscow needs to sent not a simple representative
to the North Caucasus to deal with the multiplying ethnic conflicts but an
entire commission that will consider all the problems together (capost.media/special/obzory/komu_vygodny_etnicheskie_voyny_v_kchr_/).
·
Opposition
deputies from the Ingush parliament have provided fresh evidence that Yunus-Bek
Yevkurov not only violated the republic constitution by asking the parliament
to approve the border agreement – there is supposed to be a referendum – but also
undermined even that action by playing fast and loose with the numbers of
deputies he said had voted for it. A majority didn’t, the opposition deputies
say (rosbalt.ru/russia/2018/11/23/1748365.html).
·
Izabella
Yevloyev, a woman who took part in the Ingush protests, says her gender was
irrelevant and that many other women are taking part in the protests, with the full
support of their husbands and society (kavkazr.com/a/gendernaya-prinadlezhnost-ne-dolzhna-meshat/29615112.html).
·
Ayup Gagiyev, the head of the Ingush
Constitutional Court, announces that he will not take part in the November 27
hearing of the Russian Constitutional Court (interfax.ru/russia/639203).
·
Moscow
experts say that Ingushetia and Chechnya are the two federal subjects with the highest
rates of unemployment, 26.3 percent in the case of the first and 13.5 percent
in the latter (kommersant.ru/doc/3811072).
·
The
Ingush government released further details about its future plans to develop
villages along the new border (pravitelstvori.ru/news/detail.php?ID=34819).
·
Issa
Kostoyev, a legal specialist and former senator from Ingushetia, says that the
increasing number of border challenges in the North Caucasus threatens to lead
to a replay of the bloody events of the fall of 1992 (svpressa.ru/society/article/216901/?rss=1).
·
Russia’s
TASS news agency announces that the border between Ingushetia and Chechnya will
be marked not by border posts as other such lines are but by arches to symbolize
“the equality and brotherhood” of the two nations (tass.ru/v-strane/5824071).
·
Moscow’s Vedomosti newspaper says that despite all the legal moves, “the
number of participants in the argument about the border of Ingushetia and
Chechnya is increasing” rather than falling as Moscow had hoped (vedomosti.ru/politics/articles/2018/11/22/787247-spora-o-granitse-ingushetii-s-chechnei).
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