Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 17 – For three weeks
without letup, the regime of Yunus-Bek Yevkurov has been repressing the Ingush
opposition, harassing, detaining, charging, fining and keeping incarcerated
many who have taken part in the protests. Some of the latter may have been
intimidated, but young people are increasingly angry and radicalizing, experts
say.
Indeed, there is such a danger that
this could lead to explosions, possibly under Islamist slogans, that some
senior political figures are calling for talks between Yevkurov and the
opposition and Yevkurov is taking extraordinary steps to quash rumors that he
is about to give away more of the republic’s territory, the original cause of the
protests.
Irina Starodubrovskaya, a specialist
on the North Caucasus at Moscow’s Gaidar Institute, says that it may be
possible for Yevkurov to intimidate enough people to gain at least a breathing space
and even to claim victory over the opposition. But that is not the only
scenario and perhaps not the most likely (svpressa.ru/politic/article/230422/).
She says that “a much more dangerous
variant” is possible, one in which young people, who have been left leaderless as
a result of the arrests of the more senior protest organizers, may become
radicalized in response to the repressions. “If radicalization really begins,”
she says, “it will most likely take place under religious slogans.”
Most young Ingush are not enamored
with the current set of Muslim leaders, polls taken among them show, Starodubrovskaya
continues. As a result, “there is a
demand for a new religious leader whom young people would be prepared to
follow. If such a leader appears, that would make the scenario of Islamic radicalization
real.”
This threat of radicalization is
driving two other developments. On the
one hand, Alikhan Kharsiyev, who represents the republic in the Duma, says that
repressions are only making the situaiton more difficult and that the
authorities in Magas need to begin to negotiate with the opposition (onkavkaz.com/news/2462-dlja-stabilizacii-v-ingushetii-zaderzhannym-nado-menjat-meru-presechenija-a-vlasti-nachinat-per.html).
And on
the other, Yevkurov is personally denying rumors he is about to hand over land
to North Ossetia and has sent an official to the region to squelch them (zamanho.com/?p=6486
and ingushetia.ru/news/yu_evkurov_peredachu_chasti_territorii_ingushetii_ne_planirovali_i_ne_budut_planirovat/).
But many Ingush are reportedly
skeptical of Yevkurov’s denials. After all, until he gave Chechnya 26,000 hectares
to Chechnya after secret talks with Ramzan Kadyrov, Yevkurov had always denied
that he would ever give up any land to any of the republic’s neighbors. (For an
example of a typical Yevkurov denial, see ria.ru/20130313/927133054.html.)
No comments:
Post a Comment