Saturday, May 26, 2012


Caucasus Report

Ingushetia's Opposition Ups Pressure On Yevkurov

Yunus-Bek Yevkurov's honeymoon in Ingushetia is long a thing of the past.
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Republic of Ingushetia head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov's days in office may be numbered. Ingushetian opposition leader Magomed Khazbiyev has formally submitted to Russia's Investigative Committee a request that Yevkurov be questioned in connection with the murder two years ago of prominent public figure Maksharip Aushev, for which no one has yet been arrested and charged. Meanwhile, speculation has started about Yevkurov's most likely successor.

Yevkurov, 48, is a contentious figure. A former career Russian military intelligence (GRU) officer, he was named in October 2008 by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to succeed the corrupt, discredited, venal, and incompetent Murat Zyazikov as Ingushetian president. Initially, Yevkurov made a good impression on the population at large, and on the numerically tiny but vociferous opposition, whose views he immediately sought.

But within months, Yevkurov managed to alienate his co-ethnics by pushing through parliament legislation defining the republic's borders and administrative districts that failed to list as Ingushetian territory the Prigorodny district of neighboring North Ossetia that until the 1944 deportation was part of the then-Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

Then in June 2009, Yevkurov was seriously injured in a suicide car bombing for which the North Caucasus insurgency claimed responsibility, and which journalists who regularly attend his press conferences say has affected his reasoning.

Magomed Khazbiyev
​​Over the past 18 months, the opposition has repeatedly criticized him for failing to take definitive action to eradicate endemic corruption or kick-start the republic's stagnating economy and create new jobs. The opposition also accuses him of repeatedly acting in violation of the law, as, for example, when he engineered Khazbiyev's release from custody after a protest in March, and his intervention in late July to annul the outcome of a local council election.

Aushev, a prominent businessman who entered local politics only after his son and nephew were abducted by security forces operating out of Chechnya in 2007, had initially supported Yevkurov's efforts to promote civic harmony, and was publicly less critical of him than Khazbiyev. But in an interview two months before his death, Aushev said that Yevkurov had proven unable to hold his own against corrupt holdovers from the Zyazikov regime and those "power" agencies that considered brute force the answer to all problems.

A written statement surfaced after Aushev's death in which he said he no longer supported Yevkurov's policies. He warned that he would hold the authorities and the "power" agencies responsible for any attempt on his life or those closest to him. 

Aushev died on October 25, 2009, when unidentified gunmen opened fire on his car on the outskirts of Nalchik. The opposition website ingushetiyaru.org had reported just weeks earlier the receipt of "reliable information" about a planned special operation to kill Aushev somewhere outside Ingushetia, and he narrowly escaped abduction by armed masked men in September 2009.

Khazbiyev said on the day of Aushev's killing that the blame lay squarely on Yevkurov and the republic's leadership. At the same time, he recalled that Zyazikov had tried more than once to hire hit men to assassinate both himself and Aushev.

The investigation into Aushev's death was shelved in October 2010 "in light of the impossibility of determining those responsible," even though Aushev's elderly father had publicly stated in September that he knew who killed his son.

Kavkaz-uzel.ru quoted Magomed-hadji Aushev as saying: "I know which section of which 'power' agency organized Maksharip's killing. That section has already been disbanded. It was based in Nalchik. According to our information, the band of killers was commanded by an ethnic Nogai. Apart from him, Ingush, Chechens, Daghestanis, and Russians were involved in my son's death.... There are indications that the order to kill him was given personally by [then-Russian Deputy Interior Minister Colonel General Arkady] Yedelev."

Maksharip Aushev (Photo: Ingushetia.org)
​​Medvedev had publicly criticized the Ingushetian Interior Ministry after the attempt to assassinate Yevkurov. Yedelev was then tasked with the deployment to Ingushetia of police detachments from elsewhere in the Russian Federation.

Yevkurov initiated a meeting with Magomed-hadji Aushev in mid-September 2010, at which Aushev agreed to make available the findings of the parallel investigation the family had conducted into Maksharip's death. The Ingushetian authorities then set about verifying those findings.

It seems implausible that Khazbiyev remained unaware of Magomed-hadji Aushev's statement implicating the federal Interior Ministry in Maksharip Aushev's murder. The question thus arises: why has Khazbiyev now formally requested that the Investigative Committee probe Yevkurov's imputed role? Was he pressured into doing so? Or did he feel the need to reassert himself as the most authoritative voice of the opposition to Yevkurov in the wake of a protest earlier this month in which Republic of Ingushetia residents left their car headlights on for three days to demand a change in economic policy?

Whatever Khazbiyev's motives, his efforts to discredit Yevkurov may inadvertently play into the hands of whichever faction in Moscow is protecting former Federal Security Service (FSB) Colonel Zyazikov, who following his dismissal as republican president was named an adviser to Medvedev. Zyazikov's name figures on a list of five purported possible candidates to replace Yevkurov, together with current Ingushetian Prime Minister Musa Chiliyev and Rashid Gaysanov, who served as acting president during the summer of 2009 while Yevkurov was recuperating in the hospital.

Whether, in light of the imputed Ingush propensity for "pont" (hot air or empty boasting), the Ingush would rise up en masse in an Arab-Spring-style revolt if after his return to the Russian presidency next year Vladimir Putin were  to reappoint fellow FSB veteran Zyazikov head of the Republic of Ingushetia is an open question.

Tags: Ingushetia

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by: MI-5
October 13, 2011 13:10
"kill Aushev somewhere outside Ingushetia, and he narrowly escaped abduction by armed masked men in September 2009."
These were not masked men. These were Russian army soldiers. He "escaped" only because civilians saw the failed abduction and rushed to help.
"Khazbiyev said on the day of Aushev's killing that the blame lay squarely on Yevkurov and the republic's leadership."
Really? A Russian GRU officer is the only one to blame? Not Putin "ex"-FSB or Medvedev "ex"-GRU? Funny how slaves of opposition think. They think like a dog. If the owner (Russians) throws the stick (Yevkurov) at the dog (Ingushetia) instead of biting the owner the dog bites the stick but guess what? Russians will throw many other sticks at you.
In Response

by: Konstantin from: Los Angeles
October 15, 2011 21:54
MI-5 comment is somewhat approximate.
I would like to clear some points.

Russia always betrayed its neighbours, including creators
of Peter the Great Russia, Georgia, and the Georgia-Russia
agreement of the times regarding Northern Caucasus nations.
Since Caucasian War that meant only to remove foreign bases
of Ottoman, Persian and other empires, Russia used chain of
betrails to destroy national integrity of all nations between
Black and Caspean Sea, be repopulated by Russia.

Even in modern times, not withstanding victory in WW2 and Eltcin
agreement with self-determination of former USSR republics
into CIS, Russia still expanding into Georgia (using Adyga and
children of raped by GRU and KGB Osetin women), Azerbaijan
(using Urartu Armenians), Caucasus (using direct invasion
of Russian armies and the "third force") and Erevanian Armenia
(Using Urartu Armenians).

Last contigency plans were developed since 1954-56 - I named it
"The Third Force", once.
Not all Russians agree or understand the new expansionist policy
of "The New Russia".
Eltcin did a lot, with my public advise, to minimize "The Third Force"
at least to a degree of non-interference with restoration of CIS,
according to Constitution of 1936 and other agreements, including
Russian-Georgian agreements.
Eltcin reformed new army and new Spetcnaz, but not far enough.
Russian Varanga-Prussia imperial bestiality made him mentally
durrenged and mind-controlled zamby, pointing franticly finger
down and saying repitetly:
"Subjects of Federation."

Probably the braking point was the Chechen war.
First war started by the "Third Force" that used its main bases in
Chechnia and about 2,000 Quislings within GRU and Spetcnaz,
recrouted among children of condemned WW2 war criminals to
take over Russian Parliament Building in Moscow and attak the
TV station and Kremlin.
The whole CIS nations existance was at stake - Eltcin and at least
one of army generals acted and went to Chechnya to desarm the
"Third Force armies".
Anfortunately, "Rusak-Rusaka nanuhal izdaleka" (Russian smell
Rusian from a distance).
Somehow they merged and turned on Chechens - soviet Chechens,
half of population, women and children of the rest turned refugees
and the local "milicia" with field "commanders" became the target
of Russia.
Eltcin was finished and Russia keeps expanding into Caucasus and Georgia!

What I am trying to say - maybe there are some weak overtones of the
general concepts in Medvedev cover-up attempt could be found among
Russians?
Maybe try another revolution of self-determination and democratization?
Maybe if we dig dip enough with a big shavel, we will find something
good in Russians - before start, well deserved by them, Judgment Day?

by: Fact from: Grozny
October 17, 2011 19:52
Yevkurov, it is the same Kadyrov, the same Zyazikov. All taxis Putin. Putin to hold on the throne of benefit to who is easier to make money. Recently traveled to Ingushetia to write an article Honestly I was surprised the situation in the republic. People are in despair, they do not know what to do and blame the government. In the republic if not 80 then just 90% unemployment. When I took from one of the residents interviewed, he told me that according to rumors in Ingushetia want to start a war as in Chechnya. Why? Because it is a business to Putin and Yevkurov. The economic situation and social unrest will do everything for themselves.

About This Blog

Written by analyst Liz Fuller, the "Caucasus Report" blog will offer the sort of in-depth analysis that was the hallmark of the "RFE/RL Caucasus Report." It also aims, to borrow a metaphor from Tom de Waal, to act as a smoke detector, focusing attention on potential conflict situations and crises throughout the region.