Paul Goble
Staunton,
Oct. 24 – Last summer, human rights activists were horrified when Chechen
siloviki entered Daghestan to seize and return home a woman who had fled abuse
from her Chechen relatives. Now, Ramzan Kadyrov’s government has shown it is
prepared to do the same across Russia in the expectation that no one will
object and Grozny will get away with it.
(For
a discussion of the first, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2021/06/chechen-siloviki-raid-womens-shelter-in.html; for a report on the latter, see newizv.ru/article/general/24-10-2021/krasnye-shapochki-i-kavkazskie-plennitsy-pochemu-nasha-strana-pikiruet-v-srednevekovie.)
As
horrific and wrong the first case was, it occurred within the Caucasus where
tragically such things have become commonplace and where officials have good
reason to fear reprisals from Kadyrov if they object. The latest incident is
much worse: it is far from Chechnya and yet both officials in Tatarstan where
the kidnaping took place and Moscow said nothing.
Now,
almost no one is safe from Kadyrov’s vicious use of force beyond the borders of
his republic, something that highlights the favor he enjoys from Vladimir Putin
and furthers the descent of Russia into something other than the law-based
state that the Kremlin is always claiming exists.
No comments:
Post a Comment