Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 25 – Many opposition
figures in the Russian capital have comforted themselves with the idea that the
authorities will never use the repressive tactics they routinely employ in the
North Caucasus and other regions far from the capital because of the presence
of media outlets and Western embassies.
But Oyub Titiyev, the head of the
Grozny office of the Memorial human rights organization, says that assumption
is no longer valid and that increasingly the Russian powers that be are using tactics
they have developed and perfected in the North Caucasus against the opposition
in the capital (mbk-news.appspot.com/sences/oyub-titiev-to-chto-praktiko/)
That means that opposition groups in
the capital cannot afford to ignore or fail to protest what Moscow is doing
elsewhere but can very much expect that what the powers that be have been doing
in the North Caucasus will soon be visited upon Muscovites as well, the
activist tells Zoya Svetova of MBK news.
“Chechnya,” Titiyev says, has long
been “a testing site” for the regime. We have seen how much cruelty there was
by the police during the protest actions in Moscow in August and September.
That which was practiced in the Caucasus has now come to Moscow. And this will
in the future spread throughout all of Russia.”
“It is impossible to stop,” he continues.
The regime has tested various methods to see which ones work and how people
respond; and it is prepared to be increasingly cruel and harsh because “there
are people who consider that only by such measures is it possible for them to
hold power.”
This has become possible because of
the two wars in Chechnya. Moscow got away with what it did there, and so it
continues to use the same tactics. There
aren’t any protests in Chechnya now and won’t be any because the regime has
shown that it will act with force and those who even think about demonstrating
will disappear.
Most of Titiyev’s 4200-word
interview is devoted to the two Chechen wars, the actions of heroic journalists
like Politkovskaya and Estemirova, and his own work in that North Caucasus
Republic. Unfortunately, he acknowledges, it is simply too dangerous for human
rights workers to remain in Chechnya and he has closed the Memorial office
there.
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