Russia has appointed Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, a paratroop commander, as the new pupppet leader of Ingushetia.
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Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s president, dismissed Murat Zyazikov as president of the region, which is a federal subject of Russia, in an attempt to quell unrest there.
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The mainly Muslim region has been suffering from almost daily gunfights, ambushes and explosions, alarming the Kremlin which is anxious to avoid a repeat of the separatist conflict which hit neighbouring Chechnya.
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Armed fighters in Ingushetia, with has a population of 470,000, are believed to be linked to Islamist fighters inside Chechnya.
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‘Hero of Russia’
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Yevkurov is a 45-year-old Ingush who led operations against Chechen fighters during the fighting there.
He has been decorated a “Hero of Russia”, the country’s highest honorary title.
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Yevkurov also commanded Russian troops in 1999 to take control of Pristina airport in Kosovo before advancing Nato troops could reach it – an operation that angered the United States but was seen at home as a daring coup.
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“This is a tough guy, very tough,” said Alexei Malashenko, a security analyst with the Carnegie Moscow Center think-tank.
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“He is an energetic person, young, and, since he will have complete ‘carte blanche’ from Moscow, I think he will restore order.”
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Ingushetia’s regional parliament voted to approve Yevkurov as its new leader on Friday, an official in the parliament’s press service said.
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Russian regional leaders are nominated by the president and confirmed by local legislatures.
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Economic mismanagement
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Yevkurov flew to the region on Friday and was greeted at Magas airport by members of the local opposition performing traditional dances.
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Analysts say the uprising in Ingushetia is driven by a mixture of anger at poverty and corruption, reprisals against security forces, and Muslim groups who want to throw off Moscow’s rule.
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Human-rights groups estimate that 93 people had been killed there up to the end of August.
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Zyazikov’s critics accused him of aggravating the uprising through economic mismanagement and heavy-handed security operations that failed to discriminate between civilians and fighters.
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Protests took place in September when Magomed Yevloyev, the unofficial leader of the opposition, was shot dead in police custody.
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Investigators said a police officer had accidentally fired his gun at Yevloyev’s head.
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Zyazikov used to serve in the FSB state security service, the main successor to the Soviet Union’s KGB secret police.
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Groups of men danced in the streets of Ingushetia’s main city, Nazran, as they celebrated his departure.
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Source: Agencies
Kavkaz Center