Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 29 – Having detained
the president and vice president of the Council of Teips of the Ingush People
for their role in protests in the republic, the Ingush government of Yunus-Bek
Yevkurov has now suspended the operation of that organization for three months.
Under the suspension, the group is banned from organizing or taking part in meetings.
If the Council violates those restrictions
during the period of its suspension, officials say, the Ingush government will
move to “liquidate” the organization permanently (fortanga.org/2019/05/minyust-ri-prinyal-resheniya-ostanovit-deyatelnost-soveta-tejpov-iz-za-prizyva-ne-peredavat-zemli-osetii/
and zamanho.com/?p=8390).
The suspension, issued by the
republic justice ministry last week, is the latest effort by Yevkurov to go after
his opponents. Ostensibly, the ban has been imposed for two reasons: for a
YouTube appeal in early May calling on deputies not to vote for a border accord
with North Ossetia, something officials claim despite evidence was “fake news”
and for irregularities in the group’s registration uncovered in an earlier raid
that the Council has supposedly left uncorrected.
This is not the first time Yevkurov
has tried to ban the Council. Two years
ago, he tried to liquidate the organization, but the republic Supreme Court
ruled against the government, saying that all of its complaints were either baseless
or concerned violations in registration procedures that the Council had
corrected.
The Council of Teips is the largest
and most authoritative public organization in Ingushetia, uniting more than 90 extended
families or teips, which are the foundation of Ingush society. It was active in organizing protests against
Yevkurov’s border agreement with Chechnya last fall and has been involved in
protests against him this spring as well.
Yevkurov’s decision to go after the
teips is almost certain to prove counter-productive, leading to more
anti-Yevkurov attitudes and actions by a broader swath of the population and
making it almost impossible that any agreement could be reached between society
and the regime as long as Yevkurov is in it.
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