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  • Chechens Yearn to Return to Mountains

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    CHECHENS YEARN TO RETURN TO MOUNTAINS
    [01:35 pm] 14 April, 2007

    Deserted villages are mute testimony to a history of deportation and
    war.

    As the mountain road winds its way past the Chechen mountain village
    of Shatoi higher to the small settlement of Tuskharoi, the signs of
    habitation get fewer. At one point, you glimpse the breathtaking sight
    of two whitewashed houses deep in the heart of a virgin forest.

    Tuskharoi lies at the very top of the mountain. Fifteen years ago, a
    90-year-old old man named Alauddin lived here next to a family of
    Chechen herders, who had left behind good jobs in the Baltic port of
    Kaliningrad to resettle in their ancestral village.

    When Stalin deported the entire Chechen population from their homeland
    in 1944, these mountain villages - the oldest Chechen settlements -
    fell into disrepair. When the Chechens were allowed to return from
    exile by Nikita Khrushchev in 1957, they were forbidden to resettle in
    the highlands. Those who defied the ban and tried to live in their
    ancestral villages were forcibly moved down to the plains.

    Only in the early Nineties, when Chechnya declared unilateral
    independence from Moscow, did people begin to repopulate these old
    villages.

    In recent years, as war has raged in Chechnya, history has repeated
    itself and the highland areas have again become a no-go area,
    accessible only to the Russian military. Now a struggle is under way
    between locals, the military and the Chechen government to determine
    who has the right of access to these ancient beautiful areas.

    Chechen experts say the restricted border zone along the frontier with
    Georgia should extend only five kilometres into the interior, and must
    skirt inhabited areas. So a village like Tuskharoi, 40 kilometres from
    the border, should be openly accessible. However, this village of
    35-40 households is still deserted and the owners have yet to return
    because of a long-running dispute with the military.

    Magadin Albastov, who comes from the village but now lives in lowland
    Chechnya, told IWPR, "My father and brothers were among those who
    rebuilt Tuskharoi in the early Nineties. I lived in my home village
    too, earning a living for my family from farming. I am ready to return
    to the land of my ancestors at any moment - but the military gives us
    no chance to do so.


    "We cannot live in an area where the military are located, nor do we
    want to. This is a small area high in the mountains where you can't
    build a house at a distance from other people. And the reality of
    Chechnya is that it isn't safe to stay next door to men who are armed
    to the teeth."

    Ismail Munayev, who heads the Chechen branch of the Russian service
    for protecting cultural heritage, said a military barracks had been
    built in Tuskharoi without consultation with the local authorities,
    and without his consent.

    The highland areas are home to Chechnya's most valuable architectural
    heritage. For centuries, inaccessible steep-sided gorges, ravines and
    high cliffs have protected hundreds of ancient mountain towers, vaults
    and shrines from marauders.

    However, these buildings have suffered badly from the years of
    conflict, and have also been damaged by the Russian soldiers deployed
    in the mountains.

    The old buildings are supposed to be cared for by the Argun Museum
    Reserve, which covers a large area of the southern and south-eastern
    Chechen mountains. But the whole area has been controlled by the
    Russian military and border guards for the past several years, after
    airborne troops captured it in 2000.

    Said Saratov, director of the Argun reserve, said military leaders had
    told him that they would now agree to the return of the highland
    villagers, but he said the trouble was that the villagers feared
    living in proximity to Russian soldiers.

    "The mountain villagers themselves don't want to live in villages and
    hamlets side by side with the military; they want the units to be
    withdrawn. That's the disagreement, one that cannot be resolved for
    the time being," he said.

    It is only within the last year, as fighting has ebbed in Chechnya,
    that heritage officials Ismail Munayev and Said Saratov have been
    allowed back into the area.


    Since then there has been confusion about who owns these lands. In
    December, the Chechen government decided to lease more than 3,000
    hectares of the Argun reserve's territory to the military and border
    guards. Then in February, the government overturned its own decision.

    "Besides, the Argun Museum Reserve has [Russian] federal status," said
    Munayev. "And it's up to the federal authorities to take decisions
    regarding reserve lands."

    In an attempt to ease tensions, the military has offered compensation
    to the residents of Tuskharoi, but some villagers have refused to
    accept it, saying they want to be allowed to return home
    unconditionally.

    "Some mountain villagers did receive compensation for lost property,"
    said Shamil Tangiev, head of the Grozny office of the human rights
    organisation Memorial. "But since they'd given up hope of returning to
    home, they spent the money on day-to-day things."

    Some 20 villages in the remote Vedeno and Shatoi regions are still
    off-limits to Chechen officials and villagers alike.

    "This [off-limits] territory includes the medieval settlements of Khoi
    and Makazhoi, where a large number of monuments are concentrated,"
    said museum director Saratov. "Even as director of the reserve, I have
    been unable to influence the situation, as access to the area has been
    blocked, and my ID card means nothing at checkpoints located any
    further up than than Kharachoi."

    Saratov said he had asked a Russian military commander for a written
    permit to pass through checkpoints but had been refused.

    Even when the highland villagers do get back home, says
    non-governmental activist Yelena Burtina, there is almost nothing for
    them there. Most of the houses have been destroyed and there is no
    infrastructure in the mountain villages. The villagers have no money
    to start farming, and their livestock is under threat from wild
    predators, which have proliferated in the absence of human settlement.

    The Chechen authorities are beginning to edge closer towards saving
    their ancient medieval settlements from destruction, but it will be
    many years before they can actually be inhabited.

    By Amina Visayeva in Grozny

    Amina Visayeva is a correspondent with the Groznensky Rabochy
    newspaper. Institute for War and Peace Reporting's Caucasus Reporting
    Service
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