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Karachai-Cherkessia: Small Minority Asserts Itself

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  • Karachai-Cherkessia: Small Minority Asserts Itself

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    Karachai-Cherkessia: Small Minority Asserts Itself
    [12:46 pm] 28 October, 2006

    The Nogai community wants local autonomy, but that will require
    delicate negotiation with other ethnic groups.

    In one of the most ethnically diverse parts of the North Caucasus, a
    tiny nation is making waves by staking a claim for greater power over
    the area in which they live.

    The Nogai people in the republic of Karachai-Cherkessia, part of
    Russia, have been demanding autonomous status for years. But on
    October 8, they took a decisive step by holding a local referendum on
    the issue.

    Led by a pressure group called Birlik, or Unity, the Nogais want at
    least part of the administrative district of Adyge-Khable, where most
    of their 14,500-strong community live in eight villages, to be turned
    into a Nogai Autonomous Region. Their leaders argue this will keep the
    community and its distinctive culture alive.

    But boundaries are not neat in the Caucasus, and there are Cherkess
    people living in the district who have serious misgivings about the
    move.

    The vote went off peacefully, unlike many past elections in
    Karachai-Cherkessia, and the result was 94 per cent in favour of the
    change. Ten thousand people took part in the vote.

    But it is only a first step - the Nogais will next have to seek
    approval for their plan from other groups through a republic-wide
    referendum. Assuming they get this, the matter will then go to the
    local parliament, and finally to the Russian prime minister in Moscow.

    Aside from the legal process, the key issue is one that probably lies
    outside the control of government: whether the Nogais' claim will be
    handled with enough delicacy to ensure that they and the Cherkess can
    arrive at some sort of workable solution.

    If not, there is a real danger that the issue will join the list of
    unsolved disputes that plague the North Caucasus, with the potential
    for armed conflict always on the horizon.

    Given the somewhat arbitrary manner in which the then Soviet
    autonomous republics were sliced up in the USSR, many of the
    `nationalities' or official ethnic groups have kin elsewhere in the
    region - and these might be dragged into an escalating conflict. The
    Cherkess have the Kabardans and Adygei, who together share the
    Circassian identity and culture; the Karachai have the Balkar (sharing
    a republic with the Kabardans next door), and there are strong ties
    between the Nogai here and others in Stavropol to the west, Dagestan
    to the east and as far away as Russia's lower Volga region.

    Politically, Karachai-Cherkessia works by achieving a balance of power
    between the main ethnic groups. The substantial ethnic Russian
    community tend to side with the Karachai or the Cherkess, while the
    two most significant minorities - the Abaza and the Nogai - have to
    ally themselves with one or other of these groups to ensure they have
    a place at the table.

    In the tough world of post-Soviet local politics, the Abaza usually
    back the Cherkess, to whom they are related culturally and
    linguistically. The Nogai have tended to back the Karachai, who like
    them speak a Turkic rather than Caucasian language.

    The Nogai have a handful of people high up in regional politics -
    Karacha-Cherkessia's deputy prime minister Janibek Suyunov and the
    press and ethnic affairs minister Valery Kazakov among them - but none
    in the world of commerce.

    In a region in which the republics are called after the bigger ethnic
    groups who live there, having one's own `autonomy' - political as well
    as cultural - is seen as an important way of staking out one's
    position.

    If the Nogai get their district, they will get control over cultural
    issues such as language, and a degree of self-government. There is
    little of economic value on the territory: while on paper they would
    seem to have large industrial and agricultural enterprises, in
    reality, these businesses are wrecks.

    The 30,000 Abaza have pursued their claim more robustly. In autumn
    2005, activists seized the parliament building in the city of
    Cherkessk and refused to let deputies leave until they agreed to an
    Abaza district being set up. Russian prime minister Mikhail Fradkov
    signed off on the deal in August this year.

    The Circassians, especially those in Adyge-Khabl district, are nervous
    about the Nogai laying claim to land that they see as theirs.

    Ali Aslanov, who heads the district's Circassian association, told
    IWPR, `We're not against the Nogais setting up their own district on
    our territory. But they want to make our village of Adyge-Khabl its
    [administrative] centre. We will never allow this to happen, even if
    that means we have to fight them.'

    One reason for the Circassians to be especially touchy about the local
    administrative centre is that in their language, the very name -Adyge
    Khabl - means `Adygei (ie. Circassian) village'.

    Originally, the activists of Birlik were calling for the entire
    Adyge-Khabl district to be renamed Nogai district, with the village of
    the same name to get a new title - Nogai-Yurt (`Nogai Place').

    However, by the time the referendum took place they had backtracked
    significantly, and - in recognition of the Circassian's concerns -
    they are now prepared to accept Nogai autonomous status for only that
    part of the bigger Adyge-Khabl district where their community is
    concentrated.

    The Nogai are distinct from most other North Caucasian peoples, who
    despite huge linguistic differences share many common cultural
    traits. By contrast, the Nogai were originally nomads, and still
    occupy the steppes rather than the mountains to the south; their
    traditional culture and language resemble those of the Kazaks of
    Central Asia.

    One tradition they do share with the Circassians, Karachai and others
    is Islam. Clerics still enjoy a lot of respect, and mosque attendance
    is rising, especially among the young.

    `The number of young people coming to the mosques on a regular basis
    has been increasing at lightning speed,' said businessman Magomet
    Sanglibayev, who is head of Birlik. `People are happy about this
    trend, because the faith saves young people from many bad habits.'

    Despite the positive effects of religious observance, Sanglibayev has
    some reservations about what the imams are telling people, `We
    understand that the kind of Islam that's being preached in our mosques
    is ascetic in character. It shuts off young people's access not just
    to vice, but also to the joys of the modern world. We want modern,
    educated young people, not fanatical militants.'

    A `Nogai Battalion' has fought alongside the rebels in Chechnya for
    years, but Muslim extremism has not really taken hold among the Nogai
    of Karachai-Cherkessia.

    As elsewhere in the region, there are Islamist cells operating
    covertly here, called `jamaats' - literally `societies'. But these
    seem to coexist with the `official' Muslim structures - the clergy and
    the mosques - in sharp contrast with the situation in
    Karachai-dominated areas to the south of the republic, where clerics
    have been killed by suspected jamaat members.

    It is questionable whether the Nogais' claim will ever pass all the
    bureaucratic hurdles.

    The Abaza, who have got the Russian premier's assent to set up their
    district, are finding it hard to make it a reality, as
    Karachai-Cherkessia's government is dragging its feet over the
    publication of a map that would show where the new district lies.

    There is a major hitch - Karachai people in the current Ust-Jeguta
    district are contesting the Abaza claim, in a dispute that has run for
    more than a year.


    Dana Tsei is the pseudonym of a freelance journalist in
    Karachai-Cherkessia.

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, Caucasus Reporting Service 362
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