At a session of the Chechen Parliament on 31 March, a bill was approved guaranteeing schoolchildren and students the right to wear the hijab and other religious symbols. MPs voted unanimously for the bill, which will apply throughout Chechnya.
Bekhan Khazbulatov, head of the parliamentary Education, Science and Culture Committee, told parliament that the bill will guarantee that educational policy in Chechnya is carried out without infringing on students’ national traditions and religious beliefs. He also stressed that the new regulation does not contradict Federal Russian regulations on school uniforms.
‘This bill will be an unquestionable legal aid in improving the effectiveness of the activities of educational organisations and observance of the constitutional rights of students’, Parliamentary Chair Magomed Daudov remarked while commenting on the bill.
In January, a conflict on the issue of religious clothing in schools emerged in a village in the Russian Republic of Mordovia, in which primarily Muslim, ethnic Tatars live. The administration of the village’s school banned girls from wearing the hijab.
Russian Education Minister Olga Vasilyeva took the side of the school administration, stating that ‘true believers’, in her opinion, do not try to ‘emphasise their attitude to faith with symbols’. She added that according to a ruling by the Constitutional Court, hijabs do not belong in schools.
Chechen Head Ramzan Kadyrov criticised the minister at the time, saying that his daughters would never give up wearing their hijabs at school.
The head of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, has publicly accused three Russian lawmakers — Daghestani Federation Council Senator Suleiman Kerimov, as well as State Duma MPs Bekkhan Barakhoev and Rizvan Kurbanov — of plotting to assassinate him and threatened to declare a blood feud against them.
At a meeting with Chechnya’s commanders and security forces leaders on 9 October, Kadyrov, speaking in Chechen, reportedly claimed to have information about a contract on his life. He warned that if the thre
A man who set fire to a Quran and was subsequently beaten up by Adam Kadyrov while in detention in Chechnya has been charged with high treason for allegedly sharing information with Ukrainian security services.
The Volgograd Prosecutor’s Office approved the charges against 20-year-old Nikita Zhuravel on Thursday. He faces up to life in prison if convicted.
Zhuravel gained public attention after footage purportedly of him burning a Quran appeared on social media. He was arrested and later
The Mufti of Chechnya and known advisor to Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, Salakh Mezhiev, has been elected chair of the Coordination Centre of Muslims of the North Caucasus.
On 28 September, the Council of Muftis unanimously elected Mezhiyev during a meeting in Cherkessk, the capital city of Karachay–Cherkessia.
‘I congratulate the respected Sheikh Salakh-Khadzhi Mezhiev on his election to this post. I am confident that he will justify the high trust placed in him by religious leaders o
Exiled from their republic due to threats to their lives, Chechen activists in the West navigate a difficult balance between visibility and caution, facing erasure by both Russian and Western society. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine might offer Chechnya and its activists a shift in the tides.
‘Ukraine’s incredible incursion into the Kursk region made me finally believe that Russia could soon be defeated’. This is what Ali Bakaev, a Chechen online activist who now lives in London tells m