Ossetian-Ingush conflict
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| War in Prigorodny District | |||||||||||
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| Combatants | |||||||||||
Republican Guard of North Ossetia |
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| Casualties | |||||||||||
| ~52 dead?, unknown wounded |
~600 dead[1], 939 wounded [2] |
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| Conflicts in the former Soviet Union |
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| Nagorno-Karabakh – South Ossetia – Abkhazia – Georgia – North Ossetia – Transnistria – Tajikistan – 1st Chechnya – Dagestan – 2nd Chechnya |
The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict refers to the inter-ethnic conflict in Prigorodny District, part of Russian federal subject of Republic of North Ossetia-Alania, which started in 1989 and developed into a full scale ethnic war in 1991 between local Ingush and Ossetian military units. According to Helsinki Human Rights Watch, the campaign of ethnic-cleansing was orchestrated by the Ossetian militants during the events of October and November of 1992 which resulted in death of more than 600 Ingush civilians and approximately 60,000 Ingush inhabitants expelled from Prigorodny District. [3]
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In 1924 the Ingush Autonomous Republic was created which included the Prigorodny district and part of Vladikavkaz, populated mainly by ethnic Ingush. In 1934 by the Soviet decree from Moscow, the Ingush Autonomous Republic was merged with Chechen Autonomous Oblast (region) allocating Vladikavkaz territories of the Ingush to the newly created North Ossetia, leaving Prigorodny district under the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Republic. In 1944, by the orders of Stalin hundreds of thousands of Ingush and Chechens were deported to Central Asian and Siberia due to the alleged collaboration with Nazi Germany. Soon after, depopulated Prigorodny District was transferred to North Ossetia. [4]
In 1957 the repressed Ingush and Chechens were allowed to return to their native land and Chechen-Ingush Republic was restored, however, leaving Prigorodny district under the control of North Ossetia. Soviet authorities prevented Ingush from returning to their territory in Prigorodny district; however Ingush families managed to move in, purchased houses back from the Ossetians and resettled the district in greater numbers. [5] This gave the rise to the idea of “restoring historical justice” and ‘returning native lands” among the Ingush population and inteligencia which contributed to the already existing tensions between ethnic Ossetians and Ingush. Between 1973-1980 the Ingush voiced their demands of reunification of Prigorodny district with Ingushetia by staging various protests and meetings in Grozny. The situation deteriorated in early 1991, when the Ingush openly declared their rights to the Prigorodny district according to the Soviet law adopted by the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on April 26, 1991, 3d and the 6th articles on “territorial rehabilitation”. The law gave the Ingush legal grounding for their demands which caused serious turbulence in the region with free access to weapons resulting in armed conflict between ethnic Ingush population of Prigorodny district and Ossetian armed Militias from Vladikavkaz. [6]
Intercommunal violence rose steadily in the area of Prigorodny east of the Terek River, despite the introduction of 1,500 Soviet interior troops to the area.
During the summer and early fall of 1992, there was a steady increase in the militancy of Ingushetian nationalists. At the same time, there was a steady increase in incidents of organized harassment, kidnapping and rape against Ingushetian inhabitants of North Ossetia by their Ossetian neighbors, police, security forces and militia. [7] Ingush fighters marched to take control over Prigorodny District and on the night of October 30, 1992, open warfare broke out which lasted till November 6. While Ingush militias were fighting the Ossetians in the district and on the outskirts of the North Ossetian capital Vladikavkaz, Ingushtians from elsewhere in North Ossetia were forcibly evicted and expelled from their homes. Russian interior forces actively participated in the fighting and sometimes led Ossetian fighters into battle. [8]
On October 31, a high-level Russian delegation arrived to stop the violence; however, the first deployment of Russian peace keepers did not begin until early November.
Although Russian troops often intervened to prevent horrendous acts of violence by Ossetian police and republican guards, the stance of the Russian peace-keeping force as such was strongly pro-Ossetian,[9] not only objectively as a result of its deployment, but subjectively as well. President Boris Yeltsin issued a decree that the Prigorodny District was to remain part of North Ossetia on November 2.
The hostilities and reprisals in North Ossetia produced approximately 590 deaths, 1,000 injured, 1,200 hostages among Ingush civilians, and 65,000 Ingush and 9,000 Ossetian refugees. [10]
According to Helsinki Human Rights Watch war crimes and ethnic-cleansing was committed by Ossetian police and republican guards against Ingush civilians. The Human Rights Watch produced numerous video and photo materials showing extreme brutality carried out by Ossetian police and republican guards against Ingush inhabitants of the District. The report on human rights violation and war crimes was drafted by the organization which was published in April 1996 with detailed description of massacres of the Ingush civilians which took place during the October-November events. [11]
Although pressure from Moscow and Russian-brokered Ossetian-Ingush agreement of 1995 finally induced the North Ossetian authorities to allow Ingush refugees from four settlements in the Prigorodny District to return to their homes, the return of most refugees has been blocked by the local government and only the Ossetians have been able to return since. Meanwhile, the former-Ingush homes and settlements in the District have been gradually occupied by the Ossetian refugees from Georgia.
On October 11, 2002 the presidents of Ingushetia and North Ossetia signed "The Agreement for Promoting Cooperation and Neighborly Relations" between the republics, in which Ingush refugees and human rights advocates invested much hope. However, the Beslan hostage crisis of 2004 hampered the return process and worsened Ossetian-Ingush relations.
- ^ Russia: The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict in the Prigorodnyi Region (Paperback) by Human Rights Watch Helsinki Human Rights Watch (April 1996) ISBN 1564321657
- ^ Prague Watchdog Report, published July 28th 2006
- ^ Russia: The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict in the Prigorodnyi Region (Paperback) by Human Rights Watch Helsinki Human Rights Watch (April 1996) ISBN 1564321657
- ^ A. Dzadziev. The Ingush-Oset conflict: The Roots and the Present Day // Journal of Social and Political Studies. 2003, № 6 (24)
- ^ A. Dzadziev. The Ingush-Oset conflict: The Roots and the Present Day // Journal of Social and Political Studies. 2003, № 6 (24)
- ^ The Ossetian-Ingush Conflict: Perspectives of Getting out of Deadlock Moscow. Russian Independent Institute of Social and National Probles, Professional Sociological Assiciation. ROSSPEN. 1998. p.30
- ^ Russia: The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict in the Prigorodnyi Region (Paperback) by Human Rights Watch Helsinki Human Rights Watch (April 1996) ISBN 1564321657
- ^ Russia: The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict in the Prigorodnyi Region (Paperback) by Human Rights Watch Helsinki Human Rights Watch (April 1996) ISBN 1564321657
- ^ A. Dzadziev. The Ingush-Oset conflict: The Roots and the Present Day // Journal of Social and Political Studies. 2003, № 6 (24)
- ^ Russia: The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict in the Prigorodnyi Region (Paperback) by Human Rights Watch Helsinki Human Rights Watch (April 1996) ISBN 1564321657
- ^ Quoted in Zdravomyslov. The Ossetian-Ingush Conflict: Perspectives of Getting out of Deadlock Moscow. Russian Independent Institute of Social and National Probles, Professional Sociological Association. ROSSPEN. 1998. p.102