Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 24 – A civic
activist in the Northern capital carried a placard reading, “If Ingushetia is
set afire, Russia will burn,” however much the powers that be think they can
suppress the Ingush people by violence and keep others in the country from
hearing about it by banning media coverage, according to Democratic Petersburg’s
Olga Smirnova.
In an 800-word broadside posted on
various websites, she says that since last fall, Moscow and Magas have violated
the constitution and the laws of Russia and that these violations have become
more numerous since the protests of March 26-27 because now outside siloviki
have been brought it as enforcers (zamanho.com/?p=6779).
Smirnova provides a list of 32
people now being held in administrative detention and 13 more that are already
in jail. She suggests that her list is
incomplete and that the actual number incarcerated is growing every day. Many keep being moved about so that no one
can help them, and not all are being released when they are supposed to
be.
She says that she and her activist colleagues
are “infuriated by the arbitrariness of the authorities directed at the suppression
of the will of the people of Ingushetia and also at attempts to hide what is
going on from Russian society behind a curtain of silence and lies.”
To counter this, Smirnova says, “we call
all the citizens of St. Petrersburg who are not indifferent to the violations
of human rights in out country and who consider unacceptable and dangerous for
the country the Kremlin’s use of force to impose decisions on subjects of the
Russian Federation which they by law have the right to make independently to
show their solidarity by taking part in protests” against this policy.
In reproducing Smirnova’s
declaration, the editors of the Ingush opposition site Zamanho make an even
more important statement: “Ever more residents of Russia are turning their
attention to the crisis situation in our region and precisely to the continuing
political repressions in relation to the population of the republic. Enormous
thanks to all who are not indifferent.”
“Many understand,” the editors
continue, “that Ingushetia is a testing gorund where those who have power are
applying forceful resolutions of problems under the name ‘people.’ If the
powers that be will be able to suppress a peaceful, just and democratic
protest, then in any other region they will do this with greater ease because
they’ll already have experience.”
“By demonstrating today solidarity
with the Ingush,” they say, “representatives of other peoples of Russia are creating
on their own territories protection for the rights and freedoms of man and
citizen. The leadership must reflect
upon the fact that the people is not a bunch of alcoholics. The people is a group
of individual personalities with moral and cultural values.”
And they will be showing that “the
multi-national people of Russia is too complex a mechanism to run by means of
dictatorship, zombification, and repression.”
Meanwhile, on the ground in
Ingushetia, arrests, searches, and court cases continued to mount (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/334683/,
fortanga.org/2019/04/u-ahmeda-pogorova-snova-obysk/
and
zamanho.com/?p=6790), the most important
aspect being the increasing prominence of FSB and Russian siloviki rather than
Ingush police, an indication the latter may be becoming unreliable.
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