Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 24 – None of the 44
Ingush activists arrested for protesting Yunus-Bek Yevkurov’s giveaway of ten
percent of their republic’s land to Chechnya has attracted as much attention as
Zarifa Sautiyeva, the only woman among them and someone who went overnight from
being a student of Russian political oppression to one of its victims.
Despite what is obviously a
trumped-up case, despite her health problems and despite her being identified
by Memorial as a political prisoner, the former museum worker has remained behind
bars since July 12, 2019. (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/05/zarifa-sautiyeva-ingush-political.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/07/ingush-political-prisoner-sautiyev.html).
Earlier this summer, Sautiyeva asked
Izabella Yevloyeva, a childhood friend and fellow activist Izabella Yevloyeva
to write about her, but Yevloyeva, despite being another heroine of the Ingush
resistance (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/03/izabella-yevloyeva-another-heroine-of.html) says she found
that hard because she is safe in emigration while Sautiyeva is in prison.
Now, however, she has managed that.
And in an essay posted on the North Caucasus feminist portal Daptar, Yevloyeva
has provided some important new details about Sautiyeva and equally important
reflections about what is happening in Ingushetia and indeed throughout Putin’s
Russia (daptar.ru/2020/08/25/sautieva1/).
Sautiyeva and Yevloyeva grew up in
the same village and studied in the same school, albeit in different shifts –
because the birthrate in that republic is so high, most schools operate on two
or even three shifts. But they became friends, and Yevloyeva says she learned how
close Sautiyeva had become to her father after her mother died in Kazakhstan
during the deportation.
Later, Sautiyeva and her father
returned to Kazakhstan to try to find the grave. They were unsuccessful. But
Sautiyeva who even then had found her calling as someone who would keep alive
the memory of the horrific past of her people under the Soviets collected
materials about the deportation and what it did to the Ingush.
After university, Sautiyeva joined the
Ingush Museum on the Victims of Political Repressions where she organized
lively activities and exhibits that attracted people young and old to what
might have been a musty institution. But then came the protests and her arrest,
a pattern increasingly typical of Putin’s Russia.
Indeed, Yevloyeva writes, “life in
Russia” today is such that “yesterday you may be a worker at a museum of
victims of political repression and then today became in fact an exhibit for such
a facility by your own fate.”
Because of her concern for the
Ingush nation. Sautiyeva could not stand aside when the protests against the border
accord with Chechnya began. She was not a speaker at meetings but rather a
quiet presence who often bucked up her friends with a kind of understated
gallows humor.
Together with other protest leaders,
she often assembled at a café in Nazran which she would enter with the words “What
are all those favoring handing over the land doing here?” – an expression that
played on the words peredast which means “handing over” and pederast
which means homosexual and a term many in the Russian regime use for liberals.
As conditions worsened at the end of
Yevkurov’s reign, activists in many cases fled the republic. Yevloyeva whose
Fortanga news portal was already under attack emigrated to Europe. Sautiyeva
went to Moscow but found it impossible to stay away from her native country;
and when Yevkurov was removed, she went back to Ingushetia.
Unfortunately, she was swept up in the
arrests of early July. She realized her time was coming and sought to flee but
was stopped in her car on the border between Ossetia and Kabardino-Balkaria. It
is clear, Yevloyeva says, the siloviki knew what her plans were and were lying
in wait.
“From that minute, another life began
for her, a horrific one that has lasted already more than a year,” one of
prison, repeated court hearings, and the fears that an uncertain future
inevitably produces. Much about her can’t be written yet, Yevloyeva continues.
Prosecutors would misuse it against Sautiyeva.
All indications are that she is
holding up, but prison leaves a mark on people, and Sautiyeva’s friends are
worried about what kind of an impression more than a year in a jail cell will
leave on her.
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