Karachai-Cherkessia
Karachai-Cherkessia
covers 14,100 square km and has 419,970 inhabitants, 42 percent
Russian, 32 percent Karachai, 9 percent Cherkess and 7 percent
Abaza (1989). Rural population: Karachai 67 percent, Cherkess
62 percent (1989).
The
Karachai were driven into the highlands of the North Caucasus
by Mongol tribes in the 13th century. Their territory was annexed
by the Russian Empire in 1828 but they continued to resist Russian
rule throughout the 19th century.
Many
Karachai emigrated to the Ottoman Empire in the 1860-70s to avoid
Russian oppression. The Karachai Autonomous Okrug was established
in 1920. The Cherkess are a subgroup of the Circassians. They
had come under Russian control in the 1550s for protection against
the Crimean Tatars and some Turkic tribes. Relations with Russia
deteriorated when many Russians settled in the region. Following
the end of the Ottoman claim to the Caucasus in 1829 and the resulting
uprisings, Russia completed its occupation of the territory in
1864. Subsequently, many Cherkess were deported to Turkey at this
time. The Cherkess Autonomous Oblast was first established in
1922.
The
Karachai and Cherkess Autonomous Oblasts were merged to form the
Karachai-Cherkess Autonomous Oblast in accordance with Stalin's
strategy of joining unrelated ethnic groups into administrative
units to divide and conquer any resistance. The Oblasts repeatedly
changed name and status during the frequent reshuffling of the
peoples of the North Caucasus region. In 1943, the Karachai were
deported to Central Asia but the Cherkess remained in the region.
The Karachai were rehabilitated and permitted to return in 1957
and Karachai-Cherkess Autonomous Oblast was re-established.
With
40 percent of the population being Russian and an administrative
status as subordinated as the Russian Stavropol Province and the
lowest possible level of autonomy until 1991. Russification is
strong in Karachai-Cherkessia.
The
fact that the 28,000 Abaza lack all the privileges of a titular
nation, which the 40,000 Cherkess share in power with the much
large group of Karachai, is a clear example of the arbitrary nature
of the Soviet construction of double titular nationality republics
and its consequences. Formal power-sharing notwithstanding, Russians
have dominated political life in the new Karachai-Cherkess republic.
This might change if the experience of neighboring Kabardino-Balkaria
with a similar make up, can serve as a model for development.
The
Karachai claim full rehabilitation after the deportations. More
radical Karachai movements insist on territorial expansion and
autonomy or even separate Karachai Republic, in accordance with
the situation prior to the deportations. Cossacks have voiced
claims of seceding from the republic to join the Kuban Cossacks
in the neighboring Krasnodor district.
Still,
a poll held in 1993 resulted in 78.6 percent wanting to preserve
the Karachai-Cherkess republic as an undivided unit, so it seems
that most people fear the consequences of claims made by the radical
groups. The Karachai urban centre Karachaevsk, has been selected
by the Confederation of Repressed Peoples as the location or their
main office.
The
territory proclaimed itself a republic in 1990. Special laws and
agreements: The republic agreed to a division of responsibilities
by a treaty with the Russian Federation in 1995.
Karachai-Cherkessia
adopted a program on the coordination of legislative, economic,
environmental and legal activities with the Republics of Adygea
and Kabardino-Balkaria in May 1998.
Sources:
1- The North Caucasus: Minorities at a Crossroads (Helen Krag
and Larsh Funch)
2- Datebase of The Centre of Russian Studies (Norway)