Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 25 – By his sweeping
campaign of searches and arrests among Ingush who have been protesting his
rule, republic head Yunus-Bek Yevkurvo is driving the Ingush protest movement
underground, creating a dangerous new “hot spot” in the North Caucasus, one for
which he and Moscow are to blame, according to Anton Chablin.
The analyst who specializes on the North
Caucasus says that Yevkurov has not listened either to his own police who have
urged him not to crack down or to human rights activists in the region, Moscow
and the West who have called for negotiations.
Instead, he has pursued a repressive policy designed to give quick
results (svpressa.ru/society/article/233580/).
But this approach doesn’t solve
anything, only drives it underground waiting for some new event to touch it
off. And there are many such things that can trigger new protests. Most
recently, there is the issue of the border with North Ossetia with which Ingushetia
fought a war in the 1990s. No Ingush has forgotten and all will protest if Magas
doesn’t stand up for them.
Said Sirazhudinov, head of the Center
for Research on Global Issues and Regional Problems, concurs. Harsh measures like those Yevkurov is using “give
the short-term appearance of stability but they do not solve problems. Rather,
they do just the reverse. Any new event … can lead to a spontaneous sharpening
of the situation.”
Meanwhile, there were two other
developments on the ground likely to affect the situation In Ingushetia. On the
one hand, some 300 soldiers who had been serving in Syria have returned to the
republic giving Yevkurov a new strike
force he may use against his opponents (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/335899/).
And
on the other, Ingush Republic investigators are taking a hard line and refusing
to investigate reports of torture by jailors of Ingush detainees, a refusal
certain to anger their families, lawyers and friends and make it even more
difficult to keep the lines of communication open between the powers that be
and the protesters (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/335907/).
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