Kazakhs in the Chechen war. How Kazakhs got rid of Chechens

More than two years ago, Ayan Zhumashev moved from Kazakhstan to Chechnya at the invitation of the President of the Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov. He is busy working in the youth movement "Young Kadyrovites". He calls the head of state none other than "elder brother" and considers him his mentor and idol.

Ayan is 25 years old, he has an accounting education, was born in Aktobe, but recently moved to Chechnya, where he was invited by Ramzan Kadyrov, Ak Zhaiyk writes. The guy works next to members of the government of the republic and oversees school organizations. In the latter, he succeeded - Ayan was awarded the medal "For Merit to the Chechen Republic."

The journalists managed to meet Zhumashev when he came to visit relatives in Atyrau.

The guy told what he was doing in Kazakhstan and what he was doing in Chechnya.

“From the age of 16, I worked in the volunteer programs of Zhas Otan, the youth wing of the Nur Otan party. He was a member of the presidential program "Youth Together with the President", in which young talented guys worked - disinterested assistants to the head of the country. We wrote projects, programs for the youth movement,” Ayan said.

“In 2011, we brought to the President (Nazarbayev) the need to create a unified youth organization in Kazakhstan, Zhas Ulan. In 2013, he supported us. And I became an organizer. We beat out 1.5 million dollars, you can’t even imagine what it cost me, they said: no one needs it, all this will die. But the well-known politicians at that time helped me, they believed, we agreed that not a single penny would go to the left. And as soon as the money was allocated for Zhas Ulan, people began to appear who were interested in it financially,” says Zhumshev.

After that, Ayan retired from the movement.

His career in Chechnya began in a modern and incredibly simple way. Helped with social media.

“I followed him on Instagram because I was interested in his personality… I immediately asked Ramzan Akhmatovich: “How do you bring up patriotism in Chechens?” He asked me to give him the number. I dropped it off, he called, we talked about different things for about 30 minutes, he answered my question, told about his country. He asked me questions, then said - why are we talking on the phone with you, you can come to visit me, I'm waiting for you at any moment, ”recalls Ayan.

Then he reacted to this invitation "in Kazakh": I will come someday. But it was not there…

“In the morning they called me and said - the head of the republic is waiting for you, can you fly for a week, we are waiting for you in Moscow. From there I was transferred to Chechnya. We met, talked, discussed various topics. He invited the Minister of Youth Affairs, the Minister of Education and asked them to travel around the republic with them, and then tell him about his observations, he said: “It is desirable to have the minuses, because I know the pluses myself.” Upon our return, we talked again, exchanged ideas, he expressed his thoughts about my book (Ayan writes about raising children - ed.) - I gave it to him as soon as I arrived. He said that he also thought that the country needed a children's and youth organization, ”says the guy.

Then Kadyrov invited him to stay and create such a movement.

“I stayed and became the curator of this project. Today it is a big movement. Only in the republican headquarters I have 300 of the most selective, the best schoolchildren. Every day there is something new, hundreds of events, promotions are held...”, says Ayan.

Ayan calls himself simply an adviser. At the same time, he did not specify who pays his salary - the government, the Ministry of Education or Kadyrov himself. The salary that suits him is brought to him.

Ramzan Akhmatovich's adviser said that he lives in an apartment donated by his older brother.

“In the center of the city, in a skyscraper, a large one - 100-odd square meters,” Ayan frankly admitted.

He also said that he has a company car.

According to Ayan, not a trace remains of the war in Chechnya.

“Everything has been restored: every village, every city - roads, electricity, water, gas, even in mountainous areas. You are welcomed in complete safety, guests are loved, and Kazakhs are treated with special respect - every Chechen family has a history connected with Kazakhstan. Very warm, grateful attitude,” said the young man.

Ayan denied rumors that being close to Kadyrov allegedly helped him to be related to the famous businessman Kenes Rakishev.

“I know him and my elder brother Ramzan Akhmatovich introduced me to him. Kenes Rakishev is a longtime friend and brother of Kadyrov. And all the brothers of Ramzan Akhmatovich are my brothers. Everything else is disinformation,” Zhumashev assured.

He also reported on how his working relationship with Ramzan Kadyrov is being built.

“We do not have an employer-worker relationship with Ramzan Akhmatovich. I am his younger brother, I owe him a lot and I am obliged to work as hard as possible on what he entrusted and entrusted to me. He has his own schedule, he is a very busy person, but if you have any questions, you can come to him at any time: to the residence, to the government, to his home…” says Ayan.

According to him, they meet at least once a week, but mostly this is personal communication.

“If I constantly bother him at work, what is the point of my appointment? It was funny to watch on TV how an official says: Nursultan Abishevich, say your weighty word, and I will do everything. Sorry, you were appointed, which means they have already spoken for you. You sleep, you get sick, you're tired - there's no difference,” says an adviser to the Chechen leader.

Ayan spoke about his attitude towards Kadyrov.

“He is my brother, he is older than me. He is an example for me, my personal devotion is for him. He is my first mentor, everything that I know, how I talk, how I behave is his merit. He taught me everything - how to be successful, how to do business, how to talk with anyone, how to communicate with representatives of other nations, ”the young man admitted.

According to him, warm relations with the President of Chechnya are approved by his family.

“Mom even said: “I gave birth to you for Ramzan, it seems,” said Zhumashev, smiling for the first time.

Ayan does not think about the future, because everything is in the hands of the Almighty. But what can happen to him in a year, rather, you can find out from Ramzan Akhmatovich.

In the village of Enotaevka, Astrakhan Region, a mass brawl involving 10 people took place on Thursday night. As a result, one of them died, the rest received injuries of varying severity, Interfax was told in the Investigative Department of the TFR in the region.

A brawl broke out in the rural cafe "Sapphire". According to preliminary data, the reason was a domestic quarrel: one visitor to the establishment accidentally pushed another with his shoulder, they began to swear, then fight. Soon, their buddies came to the aid of the men on both sides. According to the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, Chechens, who celebrated the purchase of a car by one of them in a cafe, fought with Kazakhs living in the village of Vostok.

The administrator called the police squad, which stopped the fight. However, after about three hours, the participants in the massacre met again and continued to beat each other, moving to the Astrakhan-Moscow highway, to the area of ​​​​the gas station, Moskovsky Komsomolets writes.

In the course went a gun, a screwdriver and a car

As noted in the UK, ten participants in the fight were identified. One of them, Chechen Beslan Khasanov, was wounded and died on the spot. According to one version, the blow was caused by a screwdriver. According to other sources, voiced by KP, a native of Chechnya received a gunshot wound to the chest.

The representative of the regional SUSK, Alexei Bessonov, told MK that a traumatic pistol was also used during the fight. Immediately after the death of one of the participants in the brawl, the fighters left the place of the fight. The police squad was called there by the employees of the gas station.

It turned out that the remaining nine people received injuries of varying severity. Two people have been hospitalized. One of them, Chechen Aslan Basayev, had both legs broken: he was run over by a car. Another, his compatriot Datsaev, had a broken rib and concussion.

All participants in the brawl are under investigation. On suspicion of committing a crime, several people were detained - they are all Kazakhs.


The Enotaevsky interdistrict investigative department of the Investigative Committee of the ICR for the Astrakhan region opened a criminal case under part 1 of article 105 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (murder) and part 2 of article 213 (hooliganism committed with the use of weapons).

How Kazakhs got rid of Chechens.

The reason for the success of the anti-Chechen protests is the support of the Kazakhs by the Kazakh law enforcement agencies.

In 1944, almost the entire population of the abolished Chechen-Ingushetia was deported to the territory of Kazakhstan. “Almost” is said here not because some people stayed there, but because some were evicted not to Kazakhstan, but to Western Siberia. At first, the Kazakhs helped the Chechens to settle down, shared with them the last cake. But soon the attitude towards the Chechens changed - the Kazakhs began to lose their livestock, and sometimes people - neither Russians nor the Germans evicted to Kazakhstan, were not engaged in cattle theft, and they did not kidnap people even more so. And when the enraged Kazakhs began to arrange unauthorized searches in Chechen dwellings, then they found there the heads of stolen cows and the heads of abducted and eaten children and women.

In order to stop the massacres of Chechens, they were no longer settled in Kazakh villages, and they began to be placed compactly in separate settlements - Chechen towns.

However, now the Kazakhs did not let the children out of the auls, and if before the children went to schools on their own and alone for several kilometers, then since then they have been taken in groups, accompanied by armed horsemen. To prevent theft of livestock, shepherds then began to issue not Berdanks and Frolovkas, but SVT, and in some places PPSh.

Here is what Mikhail Nikiforovich Poltoranin, who lived in Kazakhstan at that time, writes about this time:
“The Vainakhs acted impudently. They attacked like wolves, in packs, put knives to their throats and took away money and clothes. Young women were dragged into the bushes. At night, they ransacked other people's barns and stole cows. They knew, of course, that our fathers and older brothers died at the front, in the houses there were only widows with small fry - whom should they be afraid of! Police? It was small in number, besides, women and goners were gathered there - without experience and little training. And go and find robbers and rapists in the labyrinths of Chechen towns, where there is sheer concealment and, as if on command, they answer you one thing: "Your mine does not understand."

There are several versions of the causes of conflicts. In Leninogorsk, the cause of the clashes was the murder by criminals from among the Chechen diaspora of the young daughter of the widow of a war veteran Parshukova. In the city of Ust-Kamenogorsk, the cause of the conflict was the murder of a policeman wounded at the front. He was found under a wooden bridge across the Ulba, hanging upside down by his feet, with his throat slit.
The news of this swept through the surrounding settlements and the blame for the murder was placed on the Chechens. According to the third version, the conflict began on domestic grounds as a result of a quarrel between a Chechen and a recruited miner. During the conflict, a miner beat a Chechen to death with an iron rod. After that, riots began in the Chechen village of Chechen-gorodok. The conflict began on April 10, 1951.

“Sheshen is a pashist, a man has come to eat,” the Kazakhs said then, and if the Russians scared children with Babai, then the Kazakhs still scare them with “sheshen”. The Kazakhs had to endure the presence of Chechens in Kazakhstan, but the Chechen pogroms continued. The largest pogrom was in 1951, when a Chechen town near Ust-Kamenogorsk was destroyed.
The patience of the Kazakhs snapped when in 1955 Khrushchev proposed to form a separate republic of Chechens and Ingush on the territory of Taldy-Kurgan and part of the Alma-Ata region. Protests began in Kazakh villages and cities. Kazakhs asked to evict the Chechens back to the Grozny region. Khrushchev acted half-heartedly: he allowed everyone who wanted to return to the restored Checheno-Ingushetia, and everyone who did not want to stay in Kazakhstan.
With a decrease in the number of Chechens, the severity of interethnic contradictions subsided, but when the first cooperatives appeared in the late 50s, which gave rise to the first racket, it was the Chechens who became the first racketeers. The defiant behavior of the insolent Chechens began to pour out into protests. So, on June 17-28, 1989, in the city of Novy Uzen of the Kazakh SSR, serious clashes took place between groups of Kazakhs and Chechens. To suppress the collisions, armored personnel carriers, tanks, combat helicopters and other military equipment. The unrest was suppressed only on the fourth day.

As soon as Kazakhstan became independent, Chechens began to be beaten everywhere. In 1992, anti-Chechen demonstrations took place in Ust-Kamenogorsk, after which almost all Chechens left East Kazakhstan. In the next 15 years, pogroms took place in different regions of Kazakhstan, the result of which was the eviction of the Chechen population. The largest pogrom took place in March 2007 in the village of Malovodny, Almaty region. After that, the number of Chechens living in Kazakhstan, which had already decreased since the collapse of the Union, decreased by another half.

The reason for the success of the anti-Chechen actions of the Kazakhs lies in their support by law enforcement agencies. Kazakh cops, formally declaring neutrality, in fact always take the side of their fellow tribesmen, and even if there is an ordinary fight between a Kazakh and a non-Kazakh in the market, the Kazakh will never be found guilty. This is one of the main reasons for interethnic stability in Kazakhstan, which the Kazakhs are rightfully proud of.
This position should be adopted by our Russian cops, because if in ethnic conflicts they always took the side of the Russian population, these ethnic conflicts simply would not exist.
…………………………………………………….
By the way, quite in the recent past, Old Man Lukashenko quickly solved the problem of robberies on the roads. He issued weapons to truckers and allowed them to shoot to kill. Now the roads are calm.
So the conclusion is clear.

"Express K" March 2, 2000.
Valentina DUDKOVA, correspondent of "EK" in Moscow

The fact that in the current Chechen campaign, or, as the official Russian authorities call it, the anti-terrorist operation, the federal forces are confronted not only by the Chechen illegal armed groups themselves, but also by mercenaries from the Arab states, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Turkey, is known from the very beginning of the operation. . Much more exotic are the statements of the federal power structures that there are Balts, Ukrainians and other persons of "Slavic nationality" among the mercenaries. But the news that in Chechnya the so-called Kazakh battalion fought on the side of the militants came as a complete surprise to me. The "Kazakh trace" in the Chechen campaign was found by RTR correspondent Andrey Kondrashov, who spent a total of 2.5 months on missions to the war. It should be noted, however, that Andrei, who for a long time was RTR's own correspondent in Kazakhstan, agreed to search for the "Kazakh trace" at my request, and we agreed with him that after the next expedition he would give an interview to the Express K newspaper. However, to be honest, I did not expect such a stunning news.

According to Andrei, on October 28, 1999, after the federal troops took the Terek Range, he was in a group of journalists who were taken to the battlefield. There were a lot of passports - red, green, which the officers took apart for trophies and put autographs of their commanders in them. Blue Kazakh passports were especially valued. Firstly, there were not many of them, and, secondly, they are very beautiful, well-made. Andrei managed to see two passports that once belonged to two Chechens, Kazakh citizens. This event, in fact, gave him the idea to pay further attention to the "Kazakh trace".

The second "bell" rang in the Sunzhensky district of Grozny, when Andrei saw on the green gate of one of the garages belonging to the vocational school, which the militants had once made a powerful outpost, the inscription read: "Greetings from Dzhambul..." followed by a comma and several obscene words addressed to the federal forces. Andrey: "I began to ask the commanders about this inscription and, in particular, asked if there was anyone here from neighboring republics. They answer me:" Yes, there were a whole sea of ​​Tajiks! "I must note that, according to my observation , the Russians who are fighting against the Chechens have learned to distinguish Caucasians from Asians - and this is a great achievement, and Asians are generally the same for them, therefore "Tajiks" are a collective image.

Then I continued my investigation and spoke with the head of the joint press center, Yakov Firsov, a very famous person among journalists, for the most part for actively hindering their work. But for me, he specially prepared the data!

So, according to his information, there were three battalions in Chechnya: Azerbaijani, Tajik and Kazakh. They were called so among themselves militants. At first it was interception data, and then, later, when the bandits were "squeezed" out of Grozny, it turned out that these battalions really existed quite autonomously and were subordinate to Khattab, or rather his representative in Grozny.

As I was told, all these mercenaries from three battalions were Russian-speaking and did not understand the Arab who was assigned to them, and therefore communicated with him only through Chechens who knew Arabic. In the end, several Chechens were brought into these battalions so that there would be communication. These formations acted autonomously."

Andrei, did you manage to find out what kind of people were in the “Kazakh battalion”? You said that all three battalions were Russian-speaking, but what nationalities were represented in them?

The basis of both the Azerbaijani and Tajik battalions were ethnic Azerbaijanis and ethnic Tajiks. Kazakh, on the other hand, consisted simply of immigrants from Kazakhstan, and for the most part Chechens. Therefore, the "Kazakh battalion" was not well known, unlike the first two, and in the end it simply "dissolved" among its own.

The only thing that later allowed us to speak of the remnants of this formation as a "Kazakh battalion" was, according to intelligence representatives, that when only "Kazakhs" remained among them. They showed me the lists of these "Kazakhs"! I saw such names: Nadirov, Sultanov, Zakirov, etc. For Kazakhstanis, it is clear that these are by no means Kazakh surnames.

Then I was told that these so-called Kazakhs at one time obeyed the militant Kurban Abulaik. By nationality, he is a Uighur, a native of China, he is fluent in many types of weapons, mine-explosive business, knows three languages. Participated in terrorist attacks in China and military operations in Chechnya against federal troops. He graduated from one of the terrorist schools of Khattab. While checking the passport regime, he was detained by the FSB of Russia on the territory of Dagestan and handed over to the Chinese special services.

Subsequently, I managed to find out that, in addition to Chechens and Uighurs, there were Uzbeks from the South Kazakhstan region in this battalion. By the way, the latter studied in one of the best Khattab camps in Serzhen-Yurt. But I did not see a single Kazakh!

But in one of the filtration camps, Andrei accidentally met with a Kazakh citizen who identified himself as Alexei Belyaev from Kostanay, and made a report about him.

"Indeed, this is Alexei Belyaev and his uncle - very a famous person, two-time Atlanta shooting champion.

According to Lesha, 1.5 years ago, a neighbor introduced him to a Chechen, and the latter agreed with him that Alexey would bring him to Grozny new car, which the Chechen will buy in Kostanay for himself. He agreed and expected, having driven this car, to receive a reward and immediately return home. The car was taken away from him in Grozny, and a Chechen friend, instead of a reward, sold it to some authority. So he became a slave in the company of three Ossetians, three Georgians, two Ukrainians and one Russian from Siberia. Their brigade built houses for the Chechens, and when the war began, they were forced to dig trenches and bring ammunition. He surrendered to the federal authorities himself, with a weapon. I asked where the weapon came from, Alexey told how he got it.

When the well-known breakthrough was made on the night of December 31 to January 1 from Grozny towards Alkhan-Kala and when about 400 Chechens were killed in the minefield, slaves, including Lesha, walked in front ... True, cows were driven ahead, and militants followed the slaves. It was then that Basayev's leg was torn off. Alexei and two other slaves managed to survive. They hid in a cave and sat there for three days, waiting for the terrible shootout and bloody mess to end. Machine guns were raised here on the field, "just in case."

He was taken by special forces from the Main Directorate for the Execution of Punishments of the Ministry of Justice of Russia (GUIN) and placed in a filtration camp, since Aleksey only had a Kazakh identity card, which does not have a residence permit. The Russian authorities accuse him of aiding the militants.

Although I think that if he had fought, he would not have come to surrender with a machine gun. When the representatives of the GRU brought him to us and I spoke to him, I did not even believe at first that he was Russian. He had an absolutely Chechen dialect, and in appearance he looked a little like a Russian! He looked very pitiful: emaciated, thin, with a pale face and black circles under his eyes. He asked that his name not be mentioned in the report, he pulled his hat over his eyes, he was afraid that his mother would recognize ...

We also talked about Kostanay. Since I have been there and I know this city quite well, I was convinced that Lesha was from there. After talking with him, I immediately informed Deputy Minister of Justice Kalinin that they had a Kazakh citizen from Kostanay in their filtration camp and that I was ready to testify to this. They wrote down something, made some kind of note in a large notebook, where they registered all these prisoners. However, I don't know if that helped.

By the way, they told me at the GUIN that they had already sent a request to Kazakhstan, but no answers have yet been received... And Aleksey, according to the latest information, is in Mozdok, in a pre-trial detention center, and is being held under article 208, part 2, which is conventionally called "war, participation in gangs". Whether he will fall under the amnesty or not is a big question."

http://www.kommersant.ru/doc-y.html?docId=755306&issueId=36241

On Saturday, near one of the buildings on the campus of the Gubkin University of Oil and Gas on Butlerov Street, a mass brawl broke out between students from Chechnya and Kazakhstan. The Chechen students involved in the fight told Kommersant that it all started with a showdown between one of their countrymen and a Kazakh. "They sorted things out, and we stood nearby and did not interfere," one of the students said. Then, according to the Chechen, a crowd of fifteen or twenty Kazakhs approached them: "We later found out that the Kazakh guys were going to some kind of showdown with the Dagestanis, and then we turned up under their arm." A crowd of Kazakhs, among whom, according to Chechen students, were students from other universities in Moscow, stood up for their countryman and began to beat them. “They beat us with sticks without explaining why,” recalls one of the participants in the events. Other students from this republic came to the aid of the Chechens. The Kazakhs also called their countrymen. According to some reports, up to fifty people participated in the clashes. The parties also used weapons - gas and traumatic pistols. Some of them then had to go to the hospital. About a dozen students ended up in the police. True, the police department claims that there were no casualties in the incident. At the same time, Chechen students say that what happened is not connected with the Chechen pogroms in Kazakhstan that took place in mid-March. "The conflict between our compatriot and the Kazakh student was long-standing and was not connected with interethnic relations," they said. According to Chechens, the same mass brawl between Chechens and immigrants from Kazakhstan took place on the campus a few years ago, and then it was also associated with some kind of domestic conflict.

MUSA Ъ-MURADOV

The mysterious story of the mass brawl on the campus of the University of Oil and Gas. Gubkin (UNG) in Moscow between students from Chechnya and Kazakhstan, reports of which appeared on Saturday, has not yet found direct confirmation from law enforcement agencies. Although ethnic conflict, if it really was, flared up against the backdrop of an aggravation of the xenophobic situation in Moscow and had a wide resonance, official information about it is extremely scarce. Nevertheless, as NG has learned, yesterday representatives of the Kazakh embassy came to UNG's campus. What exactly was the reason for such a visit is unknown, however, according to the campus duty officer, "most likely about a fight between Chechens and Kazakhs." “I can’t say for sure, I don’t know, but, apparently, they came because of a fight,” the duty officer said. - At first, the director and I walked around the town, then a meeting was called. With whom, it is not clear, but most likely with students, because there is no one from the administration of the town, except for the director.

According to RIA Novosti , in the capital's police department they do not hide the fact that on Saturday at about 2 pm in the area of ​​the UNG hostel there was a "conflict among students." However, according to other news agencies, on March 31, at about half past seven in the evening, a fight broke out between Chechens and Kazakhs near house No. 3 on Butlerov Street. It, according to eyewitnesses, involved about 40 people who allegedly used firearms and one person was injured. “There was no shooting, and there were no casualties as a result of the incident,” the Moscow police department, in turn, claims and notes that the police did not detain any of the students.

NG's own investigation yesterday produced strange results. Officials claimed they had "only heard" about the fight, but "know nothing for sure". Later, the Moscow City Prosecutor's Office confirmed that there was a fight, but "nothing serious happened there." “The number of those who fought is not known to us, one person was detained for hooliganism. The fact that these were Kazakhs with Chechens has not yet been confirmed. No case has been opened, - Valentina Titova, a representative of the Moscow prosecutor's office, told NG. “I admit that the fight could have been more serious than we know, maybe they had a fight and all fled, but this fact is not officially known.” Titova also noted that "at Petrovka (in the Moscow police department. -" NG ") they also do not know anything about this."

The Kazakh embassy also told NG that they had "heard about a fight," but that was the end of all the comments. “Kazakhs got into a fight? Well, I heard. What does the embassy have to do with it?” - the duty officer at the embassy was amazed at the question of the NG correspondent. And as the campus clarified, “there was definitely a fight.”

It is noteworthy that reports of a fight in Moscow between representatives of the Kazakh and Chechen diasporas appeared a few days after the Chechen-Kazakh clashes in the Alma-Ata region. A week ago, in the village of Kazatkom, Enbekshikazakh district of Kazakhstan, a mass brawl broke out between Kazakhs and Chechens, which resulted in Chechen pogroms, the victims of which were three people and which had to be suppressed by OMON forces.

http://www.ia-centr.ru/theme_details.php?id=351

Today, at about seven in the evening, near one of the buildings on the campus of the Gubkin University of Oil and Gas near house 3 on Butlerov Street, there was a mass brawl between students from the Chechen and Kazakh diasporas. Cobblestones and weapons were used in the fight, about 10 shots were fired.

The number of those fighting was about 40 people. According to preliminary data, there is one wounded; from the scene he was carried away by his comrades-in-arms in a fight.

The police dispersed the participants, the number of detainees is still not known. Currently, a police detachment is collecting shell casings left after the shooting. According to other sources, the cartridge cases were picked up by one of the participants in the fight when the policemen appeared. Two ambulances arrived at the scene.

The Moscow police department confirmed the fact of a fight on the campus of the University of Oil and Gas on Butlerov Street, but believes that there was no interethnic motive in the fight, Gazeta.Ru reports.

As Alexei Vlasov, deputy director of the Moscow State University Information and Analytical Center, noted in his interview with the information and analytical publication EvroAsia, the clash between Kazakhs and Chechens is far from the first case of conflicts on interethnic grounds in Moscow.

However, if the information about a mass brawl near the University of Oil and Gas is confirmed, then experts will consider this situation in the context of recent events in Kazakhstan itself, where clashes between representatives of the Chechen diaspora and the local population in the Almaty region led to the death of several people. The Russian expert noted that for the Moscow authorities monitoring of interethnic conflicts on post-Soviet space should become almost the main task, since any clash on domestic grounds in any of the republics of the former union can echo in the relationship between ethnic groups living on the territory of the Moscow metropolis. It is possible that the conflict on the territory of the University. Gubkin is precisely due to the fact that representatives of the Chechen and Kazakh diasporas make up a significant part of the students of this elite educational institution.

However, the expert emphasized that the lack of reliable information does not allow drawing any far-reaching conclusions, and speculating means aggravating the already difficult story relations between representatives of different nationalities in the post-Soviet space.


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