Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 - Members of the Popular Assembly of Ingushetia
have appealed to Yury Chaika, procurator general of the Russian Federation, and
Aleksandr Bastrykin, head of the Investigative Committee of Russia, to ease
conditions for the 29 Ingush protesters now being held (doshdu.com/deputaty-ingushetii-poprosili-osvobodit-arestovannyh-aktivistov/).
The deputies pointed out that many
of those under arrest are elderly or have illnesses that have become worse
while detained, and they said that the release of Zarifa Sautiyeva, the only
female Ingush protester who has been arrested, was a matter of simple justice
and something they have repeatedly asked for.
In addition, the Ingush
parliamentarians published an open appeal to the Ingush population, calling on
its members to behave better and avoid crude attacks on one another and on the
republic’s leaders. It described those who are doing so as “provocateurs” who
are undermining civility in the republic (akcent.site/novosti/6266).
The parliamentarians warned that
those who engage in such actions are “provocateurs” and that they may be
subject to legal prosecution. “We
request,” they continued, that the people of Ingushetia remain true to their
long-standing national traditions and do not slander anyone behind his back.
(Those traditions, as the Zamanho
news agency notes, involve the Ezdel code, a collection of rules that the
Ingush people are supposed to obey from childhood and that reinforce and are
reinforced by Islamic principles (zamanho.com/?p=14240).
For a discussion of Ezdel rules, see akievgalgei.livejournal.com/117616.html).
Zamanho’s interpretation is that while
the first declaration reflects the views of protesters, the second reflects the
needs of the powers that be. There is obviously truth in that; but at the same
time, the situation is almost certainly more complicated given that the protesters
have made a point in following not only the law but their own culture.
That is because the leaders of the
protest movement know full well that if law and civility break down in
Ingushetia, there is a very real danger that the protests there will turn
violent both because the traditional leaders will lose control of the situation
and Magas backed by Moscow will exploit any violations to increase repression
in the republic.
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