Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 19 – While Russian, Chechen and official Ingush commentators continue
to insist that the Russian Constitutional Court’s decision ended the controversy
over the September 26 Ingush-Chechen border accord, Ingush opponents of the
agreement are coming up with new ways to keep their objections alive, forcing
Moscow to consider how to respond.
First,
the Muslim Spiritual Directorate of Ingushetia has announced that it will
appeal to the European Court for Human Rights, whose decision Moscow would
almost certainly ignore, and to the Organization of the Islamic Conference and
the League of Arab States, whose decisions it would find harder to counter (ng.ru/ng_religii/2018-12-18/13_456_ingushetia.html).
Second, this new Muslim activism in Ingushetia
has prompted the Coordinating Center for Muslims of the North Caucasus to call
on Ingush believers to “stop and reflect” about how their actions may produce “a
time of troubles” in the North Caucasus (kcmsk.ru/index.php/novosti/64-zayavlenie-tsro-koordinatsionnyj-tsentr-musulman-severnogo-kavkaza-o-nepravomernosti-vklyucheniya-shariatskim-sudom-ingushetii-v-svoyu-kompetentsiyu-voprosov-otnosyashchikhsya-k-isklyuchitelnoj-kompetentsii-konstitutsii-i-zakonodatelstva-rossijskoj-federatsii).
But that declaration may already be
proving counter-productive: both Ingush opponents of the border accord and
Russian commentators say that Coordinating Center in this case is acting as
little more than the Kremlin’s agent in place, thus undercutting any authority
it may have for Muslims in Ingushetia or elsewhere (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/329457/).
And
third, the dissenting deputies in the Ingush parliament have succeeded in
getting the Ingush parliament’s ethics commission to accept their arguments
that Yunus-Bek Yevkurov and his regime falsified the decision on the accord,
thus making the agreement null and void (islamio.ru/news/policy/komissiya_po_etike_parlamenta_ingushetii_zayavila_o_falsifikatsii_dokumentov_po_soglasheniyu_o_grani/).
Consequently, the situation now is
that the Ingush population and a significant number of its elected officials
are arrayed against Moscow, Chechnya and the Moscow-appointed governor of
Ingushetia, leading not to the cooling of passions but rather to their intensification
as Ingush seek to defend their territory from Ramzan Kadyrov’s
aspirations.
The ball is now in Moscow’s
court: it remains to be seen what it
will try to do next. But whatever it does, the authority of the Russian center
in Ingushetia has collapsed; and the Ingush are going to continue their opposition
to its dictates however harshly Moscow will seek to impose them.
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