Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 12 – Land disputes in the North Caucasus are not just between Chechnya
and its neighbors over where to draw the borders but around villages who want
to get back pasture lands that they say were illegally or at least
inappropriately taken from them in the past. Such disputes usually but not
always within republics, especially now.
Instead,
villages living near republic or district borders are beginning to make demands
for the return of land to their control not only from the republic of which
they are a part but from the neighboring republic as well, yet another way in
which Moscow’s willingness to allow Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov to pursue his aggrandizement
is opening a can of worms.
Residents
of the village of Kedi in Daghestan’s Tsumadin district have appealed to the
Chechen and Daghestan parliaments to restore to their village lands like from
their ancestors beginning in the 19th century (chernovik.net/content/lenta-novostey/zhiteli-cumadinskogo-rayona-prosyat-u-chechenskih-i-dagestanskih-deputatov).
Some of those
pasture lands now lie in Daghestan while others are beyond the republic border
in Chechnya. But the villagers say that these lands should be combined and
given back to them. They note that they asked for this in tsarist times and in Soviet
times but without result. Nonetheless and despite the passage of time, they remember
and hope for justice.
Appeals of this type are yet another
indication of just how problematic the borders in the North Caucasus are and
how opening the question of border rectification will bring to the surface
anger that had largely been kept in check earlier because local people assumed that
borders wouldn’t be changed. Now, they see that they can; and they are acting
on that assumption.
Meanwhile, Kavkaz-Uzel reports, local people in other segments of the
Chechen-Daghestani border are stepping up their activities, fearful that their
lands will be handed over to Chechnya without their consent. Their concerns
have been exacerbated by Chechen statements and Makhachkala’s silence (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/331571/).
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