Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – The continuing
tide of arrests in Ingushetia among those who took part in the recent
demonstration against changes in the referendum law, arrests that are being
facilitated by video tapes and facial recognition technology, are almost
certain to spark a new round of demonstrations in that North Caucasus republic,
rights activists say.
Tamirlan Akiyev,
head of Memorial’s Ingushetia office, says that the arrests are not
intimidating people but infuriating them.
People have told his colleagues, Oleg Orlov, Svetlana Gannushkina and
Aleksandr Cherkasov, that they intend to continue their protests about the same
issues that have animated them over the past year (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/334755/).
“Mass arrests cannot lower protest
activity, Gannushkina, head of the Civic Support Committee, says. “This always
leads to the opposite result.” She said she and her colleagues will make that
point with Yunus-Bek Yevkurov when they meet with him.
Kalooy Akhilgov, a Moscow lawyer,
argues that the arrests will lead to an intensification of the protests. A
major reason for that is that young people form a larger share of those
arrested now as opposed to last fall, and they are more likely to be
radicalized by the experience of incarceration than are their elders.
In another Ingush-related
development, the Kremlin has rejected Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov’s call for
the dismantling of all border posts in the North Caucasus, something he says
will make everyone there feel part of a larger community rather than remaining
in separate republics (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/334762/).
Kadyrov’s plan is
opposed by republic leaders who see the border posts as underscoring the
importance of their federal subjects. But Moscow has now vetoed it because it
believes the situation it the North Caucasus will continue to deteriorate and
plans to use the border posts to isolate republics as necessary, Russian
opposition leader Gennady Gudkov says.
Aleksey Malashenko of the Dialogue
of Civilizations Institute adds that the decision was made by the Kremlin and
shows that there are real limits to what Kadyrov can ask for. He suggests that
the Chechen leader, the top having made this decision, will stop raising the
issue lest he provoke anger in the Kremlin.
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