Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 19 – The conflict
between the powers and the people in Ingushetia is not limited to that between the
siloviki and the protesters but extends to all aspects of life, including scholarly
organizations that the authorities want to control or close and that members
are seeking ever new ways to survive.
Yesterday, the Ingush justice ministry
listed the Magas Institute for Social Change as a foreign agent, apparently the
result of an FSB raid on its headquarters last month and likely to lead to the
liquidation of this NGO which has been involved in improving the quality of
education in the republic (zamanho.com/?p=14073 and interfax.ru/russia/680940).
But
today, leading Ingush historians whose work has not been supported by the
Ingush government created a closed scientific-historical club called Kavkasion. It will admit new members only by vote and
will seek sources of funding to publish the work of the republic’s scholars (zamanho.com/?p=14077 and facebook.com/komissiya.ing/posts/113294950086865).
Over the last decade, the historians
present at this constituent meeting said that “historical science in Ingushetia
had survived only thanks to the efforts of the scholars themselves.” Much
research has bene done but remains unpublished because of the absence of state
funding, a sharp contrast with the situation in neighboring republics.
They expressed the hope that the new
republic head, Makhmud-Ali Kalimatov, may change the situation and help them
with their plans to create an academic research center in Magas. The scholars may face obstacles in that
regard given that at their initial meeting, they indicated that they will tackle
some politically sensitive issues.
Specifically, they committed
themselves to providing research support for the All-National Commission of the
Ingush People regarding the definition of the republic’s borders. That
commission was established on October 30, 2018, by the First World Congress of the
Ingush People which as closely allied with the protesters.
Meanwhile, two of those protesters,
Isropil Nalgiyev and Babaudin Gagiyev appealed their convictions to the
European Court for Human Rights on the grounds that their constitutional and
human rights had been violated (memohrc.org/ru/news_old/dvoe-zhiteley-ingushetii-pozhalovalis-v-espch-na-arest-i-shtraf-iz-za-uchastiya-v).
And in an interesting commentary,
Zamanho’s Imran Khagury says that one of the signs of the increasing distance
between the powers that be and the people is the growing size and length of the
automobile columns leaders travel in. In Ingushetia, he says, such columns are
getting larger and thus more cut off from the people (zamanho.com/?p=14057).
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