Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 29 – The governor of
Stavropol Kray established a commission for delimiting the borders of that predominantly
ethnic Russian region with its neighbors, the equally Russian Krasnodar Kray
and Rostov Oblast and the non-Russian republics of Daghestan, North Ossetia,
Chechnya, Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachayevo-Cherkessia and Kalmykia.
There are disputes between many of
these and Stavropol as a result of earlier border changes, and they may prove explosive
because unlike the recent cases of the Chechen-Ingush and Chechen-Daghestan
borders, these are not between non-Russian entities but between an ethnic Russian
one and non-Russian republics (zamanho.com/?p=9905).
The most potentially explosive,
perhaps not surprisingly, involve Chechnya, Ingushetia and North Ossetia. Perhaps the most sensitive is the border
between Chechnya and Stavropol The Shchelovsky and Naursky districts, which before
the deportation of the Vaynakhs, were part of Stavropol kray were in 1957 given
to the Chechen-Ingush ASSR in compensation for the Prigorodny District of Ingushetia
which Moscow gave to North Ossetia.
All these federal subjects include
people who think all or part of these territories should be included within
their borders. Moscow has had to replace
one republic head because of protests about border changes, and it has delayed
further discussion of the Chechen-Daghestani border for a year to allow things
to cool off there.
But it may now face more flashpoints
around Stavropol and be forced to back down yet again. It is difficult to see
what anyone is gaining from promoting such discussions as the Kremlin has
demanded – except perhaps those who want the resulting protests or chaos to be
the justification for a massive crackdown by Russian forces.
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