Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 22 – The
Coordinating Council of the Non-Governmental Organizations of Ingushetia has
added its voice to that of deputies of the republic’s Popular Assembly, the Council
of Teips, the republic’s lawyers, and independent Ingush activists on Makhmud-Ali
Kalimatov to re-appoint the members of the republic Constitutional Court.
The court has five members, but
there are two vacancies. The three serving members of the court have been on
that bench since the republic Constitutional Court was created in 2009. They are widely respected for their expertise
and independence, and that is why there is so much support for their being
reappointed.
Kalimatov can change the direction
of the court by filling the two vacancies with his own people, but if he
chooses not to appoint the three currently serving members of that body, he
will be thumbing his nose at almost the entire population of Ingushetia and
will likely face a new outburst of protests (kavkaz-uzel.eu/blogs/342/posts/41423).
Meanwhile, today, there were four other
political moves. First, Moscow named the younger brother of Ibragim Eldzharkiyev,
who was killed in Moscow last year, to take his relative’s place as head of the
Interior Ministry’s Center for Countering Extremism in Ingushetia, an indication
of how difficult it is to appoint new people in a society deeply divided by
clans (zamanho.com/?p=16388).
Second, Pyatimat Yusupov has filed a
suit against that Center for 20 million rubles (300,000 US dollars) for the
beating to death of her brother by officers last year. Her mother already was
awarded 1.5 million rubles (25,000 US dollars) last fall (doshdu.com/sestra-ubitogo-v-cpje-mvd-ingushetii-magomeda-dalieva-potrebovala-kompensacii/).
Third, republic head Kalimatov has
criticized officials for failing to have provided housing for Ingush who fled
from neighboring republics in the 1990s and ordered them to come up with a
response and a plan by the end of February (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/344962/).
And fourth, even though the population
of Ingushetia continues to grow – there were 12.2 percent more births than
deaths there last year – the fact that that number is down from 17.2 percent in
2014 means that officials want to use Putin’s maternal capital program to boost
the growth rate in that Muslim republic (serdalo.ru/skolko-nas-i-skolko-eshhe-buduet/).
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