Paul Goble
Staunton, Mar. 17 – Russia’s Southern Military District Court sentenced Ibragin Nagoyev, an Adygey activist, to 11 years in prison after forcing him to confess to invented charges that he had been working with the émigré group, the Council of United Circassia, that Moscow has identified as a terrorist organization.
Prosecutors claimed Nagoyev had operated an internet page in which he posted materials from the Council and that he had been behind efforts in 2025 to mark the 161st anniversary of the expulsion of the Circassians from the Russian Empire, an action Circassians view as an act of genocide (oc-media.org/circassian-activist-from-adygea-sentenced-to-11-years-on-terrorism-charges/).
Responding to the case and the sentence the Russian court passed down, Kase Kik, chairman of the Council of United Circassia, said that both the case and the sentence have nothing to do with justice but are “an outright act of political violence carried out by the repressive machine of the Russian occupation state” (unitedcircassia.org/arrest-in-maikop).
Nagoyev’s “only ‘fault,” the Circassian organizer says, “is his interest in the fate of his people and their right to think freely.” The charges against him were invented, including the prosecutors’ claims that he was a member of the United Circassian Council movement, Kik continues. That was not and is not true.
“The policy of our organization categorically excludes any involvement of people located on the territory of the Russian Federation. We are well aware that under the current regime, even minimal contact or sympathy for our activities automatically makes a person an object of persecution. We would never, under any circumstances, put our compatriots in such danger.”
“I am convinced,” Kik adds, “that the guilty plea was obtained under duress, including through the use of torture. This is a typical practice that has been repeatedly documented in relation to politically motivated cases. In such cases, the Russian judicial system does not act as an organ of justice, but as an instrument for legitimizing violence.”
And the chairman of the United Circassian Council concludes that Nagoyev’s conviction “is not just a sentence for one person: it is a signal to all of Circassian society: for any manifestation of consciousness, for any word, for any though, punishment will follow. This is a policy of intimidation and suppression.”
“Silence in such a situation is tantamount to complicity,” Kik says, adding that “we will seek publicity for this case and continue to fight for the rights of our people, despite pressure, threats and repression.”
There are three reasons for drawing attention to this case. First, it is a sign of just how repressive the Russian government has become with regard to the Circassians and other non-Russian groups. Second, that in turn is a sign of just how fearful the Kremlin is of their growing influence on their co-ethnics.
And third – and this may be the most important immediate lesson – it is a sign of how carefully émigré groups must interact with their co-ethnics within the current borders of the Russian Federation lest they create problems for the latter. As Kik’s statement shows, the Circassians understand that. Other non-Russian groups must do so as well.