Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 31 – Yuns-Bek
Yevkurov’s decision not to give permission to Ingush who want to protest his
border agreement with Chechnya, a decision he clearly feels Moscow will back
him especially given that some in Moscow now blame the West for his problems,
pushes that North Caucasus republic ever closer toward a potentially violent
social explosion.
Yevkurov’s increasingly hard line
and its justification by some in Moscow (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/333676/
and politexpert.net/146577-politolog-nazval-besporyadki-v-ingushetii-popytkoi-nedobrozhelatelei-oslabit-rossiyu)
put the republic on a dangerous course, activists warn (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/activism/m.275773.html).
The authorities are calling in ever
more participants in the March 26 protest for interrogation (zamanho.com/?p=5747), and Yevkurov on television
and in a video that is circulating calls for imposing at least administrative
punishments on his opponents and when possible criminal ones as well (kavkaz-uzel.eu/blogs/342/posts/37169).
His statement is being viewed as a
signal to his supporters to step up their campaign against the protesters. In
addition, however, Yevkurov is taking other steps to solidify his control.
Among the most prominent is a plan to change the way in which the republic
parliament is elected so that he can ensure it will be in his pocket (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/333672/).
At present, all 32 members are
allotted on the basis of proportional representation of party votes. Yevkurov’s
regime wants to change that so that half will be elected in single-member
districts where he apparently assumes he can control the outcome more
effectively and reduce the representation of those who oppose him, much as
Moscow has done with the Duma.
But the opposition is anything but
cowed. It has published a list on Facebook and other social networks of the 18
police officers who were fired after refusing to attack the March 26
demonstrators. These people in the eyes of many Ingush are now national heroes
(facebook.com/groups/former.russia/permalink/436302267150063/).
Opposition groups within the teips are
urging the teip of which Yevkurov is a member to rein him in before the
situation deteriorates (fortanga.org/2019/03/obrashhenie-magomeda-pogorova-k-tejpu-evkurovyh/),
and opposition leaders have made clear that they plan to continue their
activism against both the border accord and Yevkurov’s remaining in office.
There also appears to be a growing
sense among the Ingush that this is their national moment. In a commentary for St.
Petersburg’s Gorod812 portal, one of their leaders stresses that as of now, the
Ingush are a people and not just the population of a particular territory (gorod-812.ru/ingushetia). That is
something Yevkurov and Moscow must not forget.
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