A court in the Russian Republic of Ingushetia has begun considering allegations that the parliamentary vote approving a land deal with neighbouring Chechnya was falsified.
The controversial deal, which handed around 340 square kilometres (about 9% of Ingushetia’s territory) to Chechnya, was signed by the heads of Ingushetia and Chechnya on 26 September 2018.
On 4 October 2018, MPs from Ingushetia’s regional parliament, the People’s Assembly, approved the deal 17-4 in a secret ballot, leading to weeks of street protests in the Ingush capital. Following the vote, a number of MPs claimed it had been falsified, insisting they had voted against the deal.
MP Beyal Yevloyev told OC Media that six MPs from the People’s Assembly of Ingushetia appealed to the Magas District Court. He said that along with these six, two more MPs testified in court that they had voted against the deal.
According to their lawsuit, the MPs were asking the court to demand to see the report of parliament’s Counting Commission for the date of the vote, as well as the individual ballots used. They also asked that the court suspend the law approving the deal until it had ruled on its legality.
According to Anzhela Matiyeva, an activist against the deal who was present in court, the chair of the Counting Commission, MP Magomed Tiboyev, insisted he had not ‘touched the ballots and was ready to swear on the Koran’.
Matiyeva told OC Media that Yuriy Panchenko, the judge presiding over the case, read Tiboyev’s testimony to the Investigation Committee in which Tiboyev stated that he personally counted the ballots together with his colleagues Abdul-Khamid Bruzhev and Vasiliy Svetlichny.
When the judge asked whether the issue of fraud was raised in the Ingush People’s Assembly on 4 October, Tiboyev said he did not remember, according to Ingush news site Fortanga.
Fortanga was set up in 2018 by activists in Ingushetia opposing the Chechen land deal.
There was some controversy over the choice of Panchenko as the judge on the case, with Zakri Mamilov, head of the Ethics Committee of the People’s Assembly, accusing him of being biased.
Bashir Tochiyev, the lawyer representing the plaintiffs, told OC Media he had requested that Panchenko be recused from the case three times; all were unsuccessful.
The next court hearing is scheduled for 6 March.
Ethics investigation
The basis for the lawsuit by MPs was a report by the People’s Assembly’s Commission on MPs’ Ethics, headed by Zakri Mamilov. The Ethics Commission concluded on 10 December that there had been procedural violations during the ratification of the border agreement, as well as an ‘abuse of office’ by parliament’s Counting Commission.
The report said that despite the Counting Commission results showing MPs voting 17-4 in favour of the law, around 10 had voted against it.
According to the report, members of the Counting Commission did not attend meetings proposed by the Ethics Commission to discuss the topic.
Following the publishing of the report, MPs voted on 16 January for a new composition for the Ethics Commission.
According toFortanga, not all MPs were notified of the parliamentary session to vote in the new Ethics Commission.
MP Beyal Yevloyev, a former member of the Ethics Commission, told OC Media that the results of their investigation had already been sent to the Investigative Committee of the North Caucasus Federal District in the hope they would initiate a criminal case.
‘Our appeal was alternately accepted by the [Investigative Committee of Russia] for the North Caucasus Federal District, then returned to the republic again, they don’t want to open a criminal case, the situation is still not clear. This is a political issue, so the state machine reluctantly works on our case’, Yevloyev said.
Ingush Constitutional Court overruled
The legality of the deal was also challenged by the Constitutional Court of Ingushetia, which ruled on 30 October 2018 that the deal violated Ingushetia’s constitution, as a referendum was required in order to adopt it.
However, the decision of the Ingush court was overruled on 6 December by the Constitutional Court of Russia.
The head of the Ingush constitutional court, Ayup Gagiyev, boycotted the hearings arguing that the federal court had no jurisdiction over its decisions.
The Russian Constitutional Court’s ruling was met with widespread anger in Ingushetia.
The Ingush Committee of National Unity, which includes representatives of Ingush public organisations and teips (clans) vowed after the decision not to stop protest activities against the deal.
In a statement published on Ingush news site Fortanga, the committee said that following the court’s ruling, ‘the Ingush people understood that the federal centre was ready to insult the honour of an entire people in order to please their vassals’.
‘We responsibly declare that we will fight till the end using all possible legal and accessible mechanisms to preserve and restore the territorial integrity of Ingushetia.’
Chechen border talks with Daghestan
Chechen authorities had openly claimed territories in eastern Ingushetia for a number of years, despite a 1993 Chechen–Ingush agreement that left most of Sunzha District within Ingushetia.
The Chechen claims, which refer to Soviet maps from the 1930s, continued even after Ingush President Murat Zyazikov and Chechen President Akhmat-Khadzhi Kadyrov (the father of the current leader, Ramzan Kadyrov) confirmed the existing borders in 2003.
Between 1936–1993, Chechnya and Ingushetia existed as the Chechen–Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and the border between them was not demarcated.
In January, Chechnya also began talks on formalising the border with its eastern neighbour, Daghestan.
In addition to restoring Daghestan’s Aukh District, a historically ethnic–Chechen district that was abolished after the 1944 deportations, there has been widespread speculation online and in local media that Daghestan’s Botlikh District, which borders Chechnya, would be discussed.
Details of what has been discussed in the meetings so far have not been publicly released.
A map published on the Chechen parliament’s website on 8 November showed a part of Daghestan within Chechnya.
On the map, the entirety of Lake Kezenoy-Am, located on the border of the Vedeno District of Chechnya and the Botlikh District of Dagestan, and part of the area near the village of Ansalt in the Botlikh District were shown as being a part of Chechnya.
Following the report, the map was taken down and Chechen authorities said it had been a mistake.
The Russian Government has claimed that the Ingush authorities have signed off on the transfer of parts of the Erzi Nature Reserve to Chechnya as part of the 2018 land swap between the two republics — an allegation denied the very next day by Ingushetia’s vice-premier.
The Russian Minister of Natural Resources and Ecology, Alexander Kozlov, made the comments in a meeting with Ramzan Kadyrov, the Head of Chechnya, on 13 June. He said that part of the Erzi Nature Reserve was to be transferred to
Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has blocked the accounts of Fortanga, the largest Ingush news site, allegedly for trademark infringement.
Izabella Evloeva, editor-in-chief of Fortanga, told OC Media that they had managed to recover their Instagram account and Facebook group on Thursday morning, however, their Facebook page remains unavailable.
Immediately after losing the accounts, the outlet’s editor-in-chief also began receiving threats and attempts to extort money fro
Ingush activist and journalist Rashid Maysigov has been sentenced to three years in a penal colony for ‘drug possession’.
On Wednesday, the Magas District Court in Ingushetia sentenced him for the ‘possession of a large quantity of drugs’. The prosecutor’s office had demanded five years in prison for Maysigov.
A former journalist for local opposition news outlet Fortanga, Maysigov covered the Chechen–Ingush land swap dispute.
The authorities in Russia, and especially in the North Caucasus
One year ago today, a clash between protesters and security forces in Magas, the capital of Ingushetia, marked the beginning of some of the worst persecutions of activists in Ingushetia since the collapse of the USSR.
‘On the morning of the 27th, we were dozing’, Tamerlan (not his real name) recalled. ‘When we heard the noise of heavy vehicles’.
The noise they heard was the national guard, moving in on their position in armored trucks.
The protesters had been gathered since the day before