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Russia
Turns the Corner in Chechnya
Nicolai N. Petro
This weekend a normal event took place in an abnormal
place, the first parliamentary elections in nearly a
decade were held in Chechnya.
This bloody conflict has been a blot on Russian
democracy, and on Vladimir Putin's presidency in
particular. It was Putin after all who re-invaded
Chechnya in 1999, ending three years of de facto
sovereignty that had turned the republic into a haven
for smugglers, drug traffickers and slave traders, and
led to a mass exodus that threatened to destabilize the
entire Caucasus region.
Unlike most Russian pundits, however, Putin refused to
give up hope that Chechnya could one day become an
integral part of Russia. His first goal was to
eliminate those rebel leaders devoted to the spread of
radical Islam, aptly named "Islamic Che Guevaras" by
journalist and former Moscow correspondent for German
television, Gabriele Krone-Schmalz. Today, with notable
exception of Shamil Basayev, this task had largely been
accomplished.
Once these rebel field commanders had been largely
eliminated, and the political leadership killed or
exiled, Putin offered rebel foot soldiers amnesties and
incentives to lay down their arms. More than seven
thousand have now done so, with many going directly into
the new pro-Moscow Chechen security forces, hunting down
their former comrades. Finally, to help the region get
back on its feet, in the last five years Moscow has
plowed more than 2 billion dollars in extra federal
assistance into the region.
Taken together these policies have given Chechens new
hope for peace and stability. Terrorist attacks within
Chechnya have fallen from
130 in 2004 to just thirty this past year, while annual
casualties among the Russian military have dwindled from
1,397 in 2000 to just 28 this year.
The safer environment has encouraged more than a quarter
million refugees to return home, and to open more than
30,000 new small and medium size businesses. The
university in the Chechen capital of Grozny, with
roughly 18,000 students, has re-opened, as have 500
secondary schools throughout the republic, once shut
down by the fundamentalists. The State Bank of Russia
has re-opened branches throughout the republic, and the
biweekly Grozny-Moscow train has been carrying
passengers for more than a year now without incident. A
significant portion of the municipal infrastructure of
Grozny has been rebuilt and, judging from the tenfold
increase in housing prices the city has seen in the past
three years, the city is undergoing a real estate boom.
The final piece in the Kremlin's strategy for
reintegrating Chechnya back into the Russian Federation
was put in place this weekend, with the uneventful
election of a new, bicameral Chechen legislature. 355
individual candidates representing more than half a
dozen parties that included former rebel commanders,
members of the previous opposition parliament, and 27
women, competed for 58 seats. Given the republic‚s
remarkable turn around it is hardly surprising that
Putin‚s United Russia party won a clear majority of 33
seats, though opposition parties and independent
legislators are also well represented.
With a new parliament in place, the stage is set for the
ratification of a key agreement delimiting federal and
Chechen sovereignty. This treaty will give Chechens
willing to work with Russia extensive local autonomy,
while also providing a clear time table for federal
assistance to the region.
Recognizing this progress does not mean that all is well
in Chechnya. Crime, kidnapping and corruption remain
very serious problems that, paradoxically, the influx of
new federal monies seems to have made worse. Still, it
is clear that the new state institutions, are tackling
these head on. Since 2003 the state prosecutor has
initiated 400 cases of fraud in the payment of
compensation for civilian losses that have resulted from
the conflict, the most noted being the indictment just
this past week of Abubakir Baibutyrov, the former head
of the republican committee on compensation.
The region's dramatic progress has finally been noted by
European observers once sharply critical of Russia. In
stark contrast to the past, this fall both Alvaro Gil
Robles, Human Rights Commissioner for the Council of
Europe, and Marc Franco, the head of the European
Commission‚s delegation to Russia, pointedly lauded the
new Chechen government‚s progress. Franco was even
quoted by the Russian media as saying that "in the past
the West had made some mistakes with respect to the
Caucasus," and was now eager to make amends.
But while Chechnya has changed, Western press commentary
about it seems stuck in 1999. The region‚s problems are
often attributed to a rabid Chechen nationalism
described as incorrigibly anti-Russian, anti-modern, and
self-destructive. This mantra allows observers to
blithely ignore the moderate voices that have gained
ground in Chechen politics by successfully working out
an accommodation with Russia.
Audacious raids and assassinations will always grab the
headlines, but as Max Weber reminds us, after the
"windbags who do not fully realize what they take upon
themselves but who intoxicate themselves with romantic
sensations," have left the scene, the real work of
politics, the "determined and slow boring of hard
boards," begins.
Russia's determined efforts to transform Chechen society
by building popular institutions have not been
sufficiently appreciated. They have created a way out of
perpetual conflict that, given sufficient time, could
prove broadly applicable to the entire Caucasus region.
It is very much in the West's interest to encourage
peace in the region by supporting Russia‚s
state-building efforts there.
Nicolai N. Petro is
professor of political science at the University of
Rhode Island (USA) and author of Crafting Democracy
(Cornell University Press, 2004). He served as U.S.
State Department policy adviser on the Soviet Union
under George H. W. Bush.
Updated 12/6/05
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