Monday, July 1, 2019

A Bad Sign: Kalimatov’s Priorities Don’t Include Most Important Concerns of Ingush Oppposition


Paul Goble

            Staunton, June 30 – The Ingush opposition has been very consistent in declaring that its most important issues are the freeing of political prisoners, the reversal of the border agreement with Chechnya that cost Ingushetia 26,000 hectares of land, and the restoration of direct elections for the head of the republic.

            But incoming republic head Makhmud-Ali Kalimatov in an interview with the Russian news agency TASS says his priorities are health care, agriculture and ecology, issues that are totally acceptable from Moscow’s point of view affect many Ingush but that do not indicate that he is ready to meet the Ingush opposition part way (tass.ru/politika/6612012).

            Ingush opposition leaders continue to say that they hope for dialogue with the new man (e.g., zamanho.com/?p=9955), but Kalimatov’s first programmatic statement suggests that is going to be more difficult to achieve than many had expected.  And that in turn has three major consequences, none of them good.

            First, it suggests that Kalimatov’s idea of beginning anew with a clean slate means accepting the border deal with Chechnya, likely what Moscow wants and certainly what Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov does, but something that will spark new protests in the coming weeks and months.

            Second, it makes it less likely that the new man will move quickly to release the political prisoners in Ingushetia lest those who have been behind bars move to organize protests on that issue and others. That could slow the revival of protests but it also could mean that new ones will be led by more radical people than before.

            And third, it indicates that Kalimatov’s honeymoon with the Ingush population will likely be shorter than many had expected. Neither Magas nor Moscow has the funds to make a big difference in the areas he has identified as priorities, and so the departure of Yunus-Bek Yevkurov is unlikely to be the turning point some had thought it would be.

No comments:

Post a Comment