From: MSN Nicknamepsychoteddybear24 (Original Message) Sent: 12/8/2005 3:45 PM
Chechnya Weekly
December 8, 2005 – Volume VI, Issue 46
IN THIS ISSUE:
* Ramzan seeks "living space"
* Violence claims combatants and civilians alike
* Chechen refugees face hardship across Europe
* Report of Iranian training of Chechens greeted skeptically
* Dagestani activist arrested
* Briefs
* The History of Islam in Kabardino-Balkaria
By Mikhail Roshchin
RAMZAN SEEKS "LIVING SPACE"
Fresh from the victory of his loyalists in parliamentary elections, Chechen First Deputy Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov set about "expanding his republic's living space," as Nezavisimaya gazeta put it on December 6. "The accomplishment of this task has dragged on for around 15 years," he declared on December 5. "During that time anyone who wanted to has moved the boundary, and in those years Chechnya's territory has shrunk significantly." He added that it was time for Chechnya's parliament to take up the issue. Kadyrov, who is currently serving as interim head of Chechnya's cabinet of ministers, said that "both in neighboring regions and in Chechnya itself it is well known where the border ran prior to the unification of the [federation] subjects and where it should run after their separation." According to Nezavisimaya gazeta, Kadyrov then added: "We don't need a single square meter of anyone else's territory, but we don't have a single square meter of territory to spare. Naturally, we want to be masters of our own land."
Asked by Nezavisimaya gazeta for a reaction to Kadyrov's comments, Akhmar Zavgaev, who represents Chechnya in the State Duma, said: "In the Caucasus every square meter breathes malice. And territorial claims must be resolved very cautiously…This is not just a problem for Chechnya—one need only recall the still unresolved conflict between Ingushetia and North Ossetia over the Prigorodny district. Territorial claims exist. There are the Dagestani-Chechen and Chechen-Ingushetian problems, and it will take meticulous work to avoid giving ground to the extremists. I think these issues are being resolved at the level of the heads of the regions, and Southern [Federal District] presidential representative Dmitry Kozak is working on these issues as well." The newspaper noted, however, that Kozak's office categorically refused to comment on Kadyrov's statement.
Kadyrov's comments on the issue of Chechnya's boundaries were a case of being "dizzy with success," Aleksei Malashenko of the Moscow Carnegie Center told Nezavisimaya gazeta. "Of course, he is counting on increasing his popularity in Chechnya this way, but it's a losing card. To put it bluntly, he is really setting himself up, because no one is going to change the border, even if Ramzan makes threats. But the most important thing, in my opinion, is that Kadyrov has set up President Putin, who is more than favorably disposed towards Ramzan. At the same time, I cannot rule out a purely speculative maneuver: [that] Kadyrov was set up to show the head of state that Ramzan is a dangerous person, that one needs to be more careful in dealing with him and that some sort of counterweight to him is needed."
Valery Khomyakov, director of the Agency for Applied and Regional Policy, told Nezavisimaya gazeta that Kadyrov's comments could lead to "serious conflicts" both with Ingushetia and "definitely" with Dagestan. "It is a highly debatable statement, especially from the standpoint of stability in the region, about which Kadyrov often talks, and it would appear that he views himself as virtually the main guarantor of that very stability. It seems that his head has been turned a bit by the rapt attention he is getting from the media and from the federal authorities. I hope that Ramzan will be set straight here, from Moscow, because in Chechnya there is no one to set him straight; he has already monopolized everything there."
Anatoly Lesnykh, the head of Stavropol Governor Aleksandr Chernogorov's press service, played down the possibility of a territorial dispute with Chechnya. "Yes, Chechnya has disputes with Ingushetia, but that is their problem," he told Nezavisimaya gazeta. "As for us, in 1958 Checheno-Ingushetia ‘grew' by two large districts from Stavropol Krai, Shelkovsky and Nadterechny. But we are not putting forward any claims on them!" Eduard Urazaev, press secretary to Dagestan State Council head Magomedali Magomedov, also said he saw no grounds for a dispute: "If our neighbors have ever advanced any territorial claims against us, then it was in the days of Ichkeria. I do not think that Ramzan Kadyrov is following in Dzhokhar Dudaev's footsteps." Umar Sapraliev, Ingushetia's deputy representative to the president of the Russian Federation, said his office had not heard about Kadyrov's statement. "But even if such a statement was made," he added, "Chechnya cannot have any territorial claims on us, because all the disputes on this point were settled back in the time of Akhmad Kadyrov."