Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 16 – Aleksandr Mukomolov,
head of the permanent commission of Putin’s Presidential Council for Civil
Society and Human Rights, met earlier this week in Magas with Makhmud-Ali
Kalimatov to discuss the state of civil society and human rights in the
Republic of Ingushetia.
The meeting and its focus were reported by
the Moscow Council on its website (president-sovet.ru/presscenter/news/read/6091/),
but it hasn’t been on Ingush government sites and it appears that the talks involved
only Mukomolov and Kalimatov and no one from the human rights movement in
Ingushetia.
Not surprisingly, many in Ingushetia are now
asking how such a topic could be discussed in the absence of representatives of
civil society and say this is typical of how Ingush and Moscow leaders make decisions
about them without them (fortanga.org/2020/02/chto-obsuzhdali-kalimatov-s-mukomolovym-na-kuluarnoj-vstreche-v-otsutstvie-predstavitelej-grazhdanskogo-obshhestva/
and 6portal.ru/posts/тайная-миссия-члена-спч-при-президент/#more-1026).
Meanwhile, Mukhammed
Azhigov, a social activist who has been involved with the now-shuttered “First
Aid” assistance group reports that he is being followed by siloviki in what
appears to be an attempt to intimidate him and anyone who might cooperate with him
(fortanga.org/2020/02/aktivist-muhammad-azhigov-zayavil-o-slezhke-za-nim-so-storony-pravohranitelnyh-organov/
and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/345995/).
But
perhaps the saddest story from Ingushetia today wasn’t about the way its
leaders make decisions or the fate of those who have protested against them but
a report that the republic has allocated less than a quarter of the money
needed to ensure pupils have the necessary textbooks this fall (capost.media/news/obrazovanie/deneg-net-v-ingushetii-detyam-ne-khvataet-uchebnikov/).
If
the funds are not found, those attending schools in Ingushetia will have to do
without the basic textbooks they need. It is perhaps significant that this
report came not from the Ingush
education ministry but rather from investigators looking in to the misuse of
funds in the republic’s schools.
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