Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 17 – The Ingush
protest movement has been committed to staying within the law even though the
authorities haven’t kept within the limits. But now, the cases officials have
brought against activists are in the courts, not in Ingushetia but in Russia’s
Stavropol Kray and eventually in the European Court for Human Rights in
Strasbourg.
Today, a Stavropol court sentenced
Zelimkhan Tomov to 17 months in a labor camp, a lighter sentence that prosecutors
had sought and yet another indication that the courts may be softening the
punishments in order to avoid sparking new protests (doshdu.com/vynesen-prigovor-tret-emu-obvinyaemomu-po-delu-o-mitinge-v-ingushetii/
and golosislama.com/news.php?id=37728).
Meanwhile, another Stavropol court
extended the detention of two other Ingush activists: that of Timur Oziyev and
Ahmed Nalgiyev until March 6 (https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/343641/,
kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/343639/
and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/343636/).
Nalgiyev faces another hearing next week.
And the Memorial human rights
organization has submitted an appeal to the European Court for Human Rights on
behalf of Murat Bekov, Vakkhi Dzeytov, Rusland Dzytov, and Ilez Barahoeva, who
were fined for their role in the March 2019 protests in Magas (doshdu.com/uchastniki-protestov-v-ingushetii-napravili-zhaloby-v-espch/,
doshdu.com/espch-objazal-rossiju-vyplatit-kompensacii-za-pohishhennyh-silovikami-zhitelej-severnogo-kavkaza/ and doshdu.com/chetvero-zhitelej-ingushetii-pozhalovalis-v-espch-po-shtrafam-za-uchastie-v-mitinge/).
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