Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 15 – Islamic leaders with their roots in the Ingush population have long
been more popular and authoritative than the political elite appointed by
Moscow, experts at a seminar organized by the Moscow Institute of Oriental
Studies this week say; but the recent protests over the Ingush-Chechen border
accord have only increased their advantage.
Makka
Albogachiyeva of the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography says that the
Ingush have always viewed the Muslim leaders as their own and the political
elite especially in recent years as outsiders. Not surprisingly, they accept
the positions of the mufti, imams and Sufi sheikhs far more readily than they
do those of the politicians (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/331774/).
Akhmet Yarlykapov of MGIMO agrees.
He says that “some expected” that the Muslim leaders of Ingushetia would remain
neutral after the September 26 border agreement between Yunus-Bek Yevkurov and Chechnya’s
Ramzan Kadyrov; but instead, these leaders supported the protests and have gained
even greater popular authority as a result.
Even before the protests, Vadim Mukhanov, another
specialist on the North Caucasus at MGIMO says, the authority of the Muslim
leaders was higher than that of the political class in Ingushetia but the
protests over the last four months and the support the Muslim leaders have
given to it have only increased that gap.
The
expert community expected such a development, he continues, but the authorities
failed to turn to it and therefore operated on the mistaken assumption that
they could push through a border accord, overcome protests, and not put the
Muslim leadership on the path to even greater influence and power in
Ingushetia.
An
important indication of this change in the relative standing of the secular and
religious leadership has been the call to use shariat rather than civil law to
resolve the dispute over the border accord. Both Chechens and Ingush are
inclined to do so, but the secular authorities have done everything they can to
block it.
Few
major issues have been decided by shariat courts in recent years, Yarlykapov
and Mukhanov point out; but many in the region remember that in the early
1990s, independence-minded Chechens tried to do so. Those were suppressed along
with Ichkeria; but now, many in Daghestan as in Ingusheti are pushing to have
the shariat courts address such issues.
In
Daghestan, this is especially the case among the Kumyks; and Yarlykapov says
that the experience of that nation in using shariat law to resolve land
disputes means that that approach should not be ignored all the more so because
it is likely to increase in frequency in the future.
In
short, by allowing Chechen leader Kadyrov to pursue the aggrandizement of his
republic, Moscow has simultaneously weakened the secular authorities in the
region and strengthened the Islamic ones, an outcome that few if any in Moscow
want and one that presages ever greater difficulties for the center there.
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