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#30 - JRL 2006-207 - JRL Home
Jamestown Foundation
www.Jamestown.org
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 3, Number 168
September 13, 2006
DISPUTABLE ANNIVERSARY COULD PROVOKE NEW CRISIS IN
ADYGEYA
By Andrei Smirnov
On September 9 Russian President Vladimir Putin signed three decrees that
could deepen the crisis in the volatile North Caucasus. Putin issued the decrees
to celebrate the 450th anniversary of the voluntary unification of Adygeya,
Karachaevo-Cherkessia, and Kabardino-Balkaria with Russia.
In the 16th century, a large ethnic group, known as Circassians or Adygeis,
populated the western section of the North Caucasus. At that time the Adygeis
were divided into three groups, including those who lived near the Black Sea
coast, those who lived in what is now Karachaevo-Cherkessia and Abkhazia, and
those who lived in present day Kabardino-Balkaria. These tribes faced strong
pressure from the Turks and their vassals, the Crimean Tatars. Prince Timruk, a
Kabardinian leader, appealed to Russia’s leader, Ivan the Terrible, proposing an
anti-Tatar and anti-Turk union between Russia and Kabarda. This union was
strengthened by the marriage of Timruk’s daughter, Maria, to the Russian tsar in
1557.
However, genuine unification never occurred. Only a temporary military union
was formed between some Kabardinian princes and Russia against Turkey in 1557.
At that time Russia’s borders were too far from the North Caucasus to fully
incorporate this distant region. Three centuries later, as the borders of the
Russian empire neared the Caucasus, the Russian army met strong resistance.
According to Tarkho, a famous Adygei historian, "There are old Russian maps
marking 1822 or 1825 as the dates when Kabarda was incorporated into Russia.
There are other such dates like 1846 or 1812, for example. These differences are
understandable, because in reality there was never any voluntarily unification.”
Instead, there was a bloody war that ended in 1864 with the mass deportation
of Circassians to Turkey and Russian colonization of their lands.
Ironically, the idea to celebrate the controversial anniversary was first
initiated by the government of Adygeya, yet of the three republics slated for
the celebration, the strongest popular resistance comes from Adygeya. This
contradiction can be explained by the current political and economic situation
in the republic.
Adygeya has fended off several recent attempts by Moscow to eliminate its
autonomy and to merge it with Krasnodar krai (see EDM, April 6). Last April
Khasret Sovmen, the Adygei president, won a serious standoff with the Russian
authorities, who wanted him to resign because he resisted the incorporation
plans (see EDM, April 10). Although Sovmen remained in power, he found himself
in a difficult position as Adygeya’s share of the federal budget was slashed
after the standoff between Sovmen and the Kremlin. For example, Adygeya
reportedly did not receive any of the 400 million rubles that Moscow was
supposed to invest in local agriculture (Regnum, July 15).
In addition to funding problems, Adygei factories like Maykop Beer Brewery or
Giagin Sugar are finding it difficult to sell their products outside the
republic. At the same time, all attempts by the Circassian diaspora to invest in
Adygeya have met firm resistance from the Russian authorities. On May 30
immigration guards at Krasnodar airport stopped and sent back to Turkey a famous
Turkish businessman of Adygei origin, Muzaffar Avdzhi (Dzyiba), who was
exploring local investment opportunities (Regnum, June 1). The Kremlin
apparently believes that causing more trouble for the local economy will weaken
Sovmen’s influence. It may also accelerate the region’s incorporation into
Krasnodar krai, since Adygeya’s reputed “economic bankruptcy” is a favorite
Kremlin excuse for the unification. Moreover, the Kremlin is not interested at
all in investments from Adygeis who live abroad, especially in the Middle East.
Sovmen evidently has decided to use the upcoming anniversary to demonstrate
his loyalty to the federal government. According to Jamestown sources in Adygeya,
some time ago people from the republican government got in touch with Murat
Khapsirokov, an Adygei who is an aide of Igor Sechin, a deputy head of the
Russian Presidential Administration, and asked for money to spend to celebrate
the anniversary in 2007. The governments of Kabardino-Balkaria and
Karachaevo-Cherkessia later supported the request, as both regions wanted to
share any funding, rumored to be as much as $100 million. Since the decrees to
celebrate the anniversary were issued by Putin, the Adygei government must
finally have Moscow’s full support.
Yet Adygei society was enraged when the commemoration plans became public.
The Executive Committee of the Adigeysk town branch of the Adige Khase, an
organization that is very influential in Adygeya, issued a special statement
saying, "To hold such a celebration means partly to justify the actions of the
Russian empire in the territory of Circassia in the 19th century. It will look
[as though] during the Russian-Caucasian war Adygeis did not defend their
freedom, but were ‘separatists’ who revolted against legitimate authorities.
This celebration means that there was no war of free Cherkessia against the
aggressor, but it was [redefined as] a ‘counterterrorist operation’ ” (Regnum,
August 8).
The Circassian Congress, a more radical Adygei organization, supported this
statement. Murat Berzegov, chairman of the Circassian Congress, told Kavkazky
Uzel, "Our stand is clear on this issue; one should not celebrate a date that
does not exist in history" (Kavkazky Uzel, September 10).
The interests of the governments of Adygeya, Karachaevo-Cherkessia, and
Kabardino-Balkaria are clear -- they need money from the federal center, while
the Kremlin wants to demonstrate its firm control over the North Caucasus.
However, it is clear that both the Russian authorities and the local governments
are playing with fire, especially the government of Adygeya. While portions of
Karachaevo-Cherkessia and Kabardino-Balkaria appear to already have Islamic,
anti-Russian sentiments, Adygeya is still relatively calm, but continuing with
this questionable celebration could easily spark a conflict.
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