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Ingush people

Ingush[a] (Ingush: Гӏалгӏай, romanized: Ghalghai,[10] pronounced [ˈʁəlʁɑj]), historically known as Durdzuks, Gligvi and Kists, are a Northeast Caucasian ethnic group mainly inhabiting the Republic of Ingushetia in central Caucasus, but also inhabitanting Prigorodny District and town of Vladikavkaz of modern day North-Ossetia. The Ingush are predominantly Sunni Muslims and speak the Ingush language.[11]

Total population

517,186 (2021)[3]

473,440 (2021)

1,100 (2021)

24,285 (2021)

85,000 (2019)[1][2]

18,000 (2016)[4]

1800s–1860s: Insurgency against Russian conquest.

1860s–1890s: Raids of Ingush abreks on the Georgian Military Highway and Mozdok.

1890s–1917: Insurgency of Ingush resistance under Chechen Zelimkhan and Ingush abrek Sulumbek, execution of Russian viceroy to Ingushetia colonel Mitnik by Ingush resistance fighter Buzurtanov.

abrek

1917–1920s: Insurgency of Ingush resistance fighters against combined Russian White Guards, Cossacks, Ossetians, and general Denikin forces.

1920s–1930s: Insurgency of Ingush people against Communists, executions of Communist leader of Ingushetia Chernoglaz by Ingush rebel Uzhakhov. Execution of Communist party leader of Ingushetia Ivanov by Ingush rebels.

1944–1977: Ingush rebels avenging the deportation of the Ingush nation. Scores of Russian army units and , KGB officers killed.

NKVD

1992: Ossetian-Ingush conflict. In combat operations Ingush rebels capture armor which later transferred to Chechens or given back to Russian army after the conflict ended.

1994: Nazran. Ingush civilians stop Russian army, flip armor, burn military trucks which were on the march to Chechnya in Russian-Chechen war. First Russian casualties reported from hands of Ingush rebels.

1994–1996: Ingush rebels defend Grozny and participate in combat operations on Chechen side.

1999–2006: Ingush rebels join Chechen rebels, the independence war turns into .

Jihad

13 July 2001: Ingush people protest "defiling and desecration" of historical Christian Ingush church after Russian troops made the church into a public toilet. Though Ingush are Muslims they highly respect their Christian past.[106]

Tkhaba-Yerdy

15 September 2003: Ingush rebels use bomb truck and attack headquarters in Maghas. Several dozens of Russian FSB officers killed including the senior officer overseeing the FSB in Chechen republic. The several story HQ building is severely damaged.[107]

FSB

6 April 2004: Ingush rebels attack Russian appointed president of Ingushetia . He was wounded when a car bomb was rammed into his motorcade.

Murat Zyazikov

22 June 2004: Chechen and Ingush rebels on Russian troops in Ingushetia. Hundreds of Russian troops killed.

raid

31 August 2008: Execution of Ingush dissident, journalist, lawyer, businessman, and the owner of the news website Ingushetiya.ru, known for being highly critical of Russian regime in Ingushetia. He was shot in the temple.[108] Awarded posthumously, and his name is engraved in stone on the monuments at the Journalists' Memorials in Bayeux, France and Washington D.C., the United States.[109]

Magomed Yevloyev

30 September 2008: A suicide bomber attacked the motorcade of Ruslan Meiriyev, Ingushetia's top police official.

10 June 2009: Snipers killed , deputy chief justice of the regional Supreme Court, as she dropped her children off at school. Russian news agencies also cited investigators as saying she was likely killed for her role in investigating the 2004 attack on Ingush police forces by Chechen fighters.[110]

Aza Gazgireyeva

13 June 2009: Two gunmen sprayed former deputy prime minister with automatic-weapon fire as he got out of his car at the gate outside his home in the region's main city, Nazran.[111]

Bashir Aushev

22 June 2009: Russian appointed president of Ingushetia was badly hurt when a suicide bomber detonated a car packed with explosives as the president's convoy drove past. The attack killed three bodyguards.[112]

Yunus-Bek Yevkurov

12 August 2009: Gunmen killed construction minister in his office in the Ingush capital, Magas.[113]

Ruslan Amerkhanov

17 August 2009: A suicide bomber killed 21 Ingush police officers and unknown numbers of which were stationed in Nazran, after he drove a truck full of explosives into a MVD police base.

Russian Internal Ministry troops

25 October 2009: Execution of , an Ingush businessman, dissident, and a vocal critic of Russian regime policies in Ingushetia. His body had over 60 bullet holes. Awarded posthumously by the U.S. Department of State in 2009.[114]

Maksharip Aushev

5 April 2010: A suicide bomber injured three police officers in the town of . Two officers died at the hospital as a result of their injuries. While investigators arrived on scene, another car bomb was set off by remote. Nobody was hurt in the second blast.[115]

Karabulak

24 January 2011: A suicide bomber, Magomed Yevloyev (same first and last name as the slain Ingush opposition journalist ), killed 37 people at Domodedovo airport, Moscow, Russia.

Magomed Yevloyev

2012: Ingush rebels participate in war against , Iranian, and Russian advisors in Syria which is largely viewed by the Ingush rebels as war against Russia and the Iranian-speaking Ossetians. The rebel Ingush commanders are veterans of Ossetian-Ingush conflict, wars in Chechnya, Daud Khalukhayev from Ingush village of Palanazh (Katsa), and a descendant of Ingush deportees of 1860's Syrian-born Ingush Walid Didigov.[116][117]

Assad

6 June 2013: Accusation of Ingush rebel leader Ali "" Taziev in Rostov-On-Don regional Russian court, who was captured after he voluntarily given himself up in on 9 June 2010 to Russian forces in Ingushetia on the agreement that Russians will liberate his relatives held hostage on one of the Russian military bases.

Maghas

27 August 2013: Execution of the head of security of Ingushetia Akhmet Kotiev and his bodyguard by . Kotiev was actively involved in the assassination of Magomed Yevloyev.

Ingush rebels

10 December 2013: Ingush opposition leader , who was a close friend of assassinated Magomed Yevloyev, attends Euromaidan in Ukraine and participates in anti-Russian campaign there after which his parents were threatened and harassed in Russia. On his website he writes: "the fact that Putin's slaves harass my parents do not make any sense, if you [Russians] want me to stop you have to kill me like Magomed Yevloyev and Makhsharip Aushev".[118]

Magomed Khazbiev

2 February 2014: Russian officially confirms that in the middle of December 2013 four North Caucasian instructors operate in Ukraine, and prepare Ukrainians for street battles against Russian interests.[119]

FSB

20 April 2014: Famous Ingush human rights defender stated that Ingushetia wants to separate from Russia and become an independent state using the example of the Crimean separation from Ukraine.[120]

Ibrgim Lyanov

24 May 2014: Ingush rebel leader , 4 rebels, and 2 civilians were killed in action in the village of Sagopshi by Russian forces.[121]

Arthur Getagazhev

2 July 2014: After several months of denial, pro-Russian president of Ingushetia finally recognizes that Ingush rebels are fighting in against pro-Russia forces.[122]

Ukraine

2 July 2014: Ingush rebels attack Russian armored military convoy killing 1 and wounding 7 soldiers.

[123]

6 July 2014: Russian special forces prepared an ambush near the morgue in hospital where the body of Arthur Getagazhev was located. The intelligence reported that Ingush rebels will try to recover the body of the slain leader. The intelligence was correct. Radio Free Europe (section specializing in the Caucasus), reports that in the middle of the day 2 Ingush rebels attacked the ambush, according to unofficial source two rebels killed 7 and wounded 4 Russian FSB and spetsnaz officers in less than 40 seconds, after which the rebels left the scene unharmed. The source in Ingush police who wanted to stay anonymous said that exact number of killed are known only by the FSB but nobody would dare to declare if officially.[124] According to pro-Kremlin LifeNews released video the attack lasted less than 19 seconds.[125]

Nazran

26 March 2019: Thousands of people in Ingushetia have protested against a controversial border deal with neighboring Chechnya, denouncing land swaps under the agreement and calling for Ingushetia head Yunus-Bek Yevkurov to step down.

25 June 2019: Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, has announced his resignation after almost 11 years in the position. De facto Ingushetia has no active leader. Civil protests continue, Ingush people boycotting the Russian appointed elections.

Origin of the Ingush population

According to Leonti Mroveli, the 11th-century Georgian chronicler, the word Caucasian is derived from the Vainakh ancestor Kavkas.[133] According to Professor George Anchabadze of Ilia State University "The Vainakhs are the ancient natives of the Caucasus. It is noteworthy, that according to the genealogical table drawn up by Leonti Mroveli, the legendary forefather of the Vainakhs was "Kavkas", hence the name Kavkasians, one of the ethnicons met in the ancient Georgian written sources, signifying the ancestors of the Chechens and Ingush. As appears from the above, the Vainakhs, at least by name, are presented as "the most Caucasian people of all the Caucasians" (Caucasus – Kavkas – Kavkasians) in the Georgian historical tradition.[134][135] In an article from the Science Magazine Bernice Wuethrich states that American linguist Dr. Johanna Nichols has used language to connect modern people of the Caucasus region to the ancient farmers of the Fertile Crescent and that her research suggests that "farmers of the region were proto-Nakh-Daghestanians". Nichols is quoted as stating that "The Nakh–Dagestanian languages are the closest thing we have to a direct continuation of the cultural and linguistic community that gave rise to Western civilization".[136]

Genetics

The Ingush have 89% of J2 Y-DNA which is the highest known frequency in the world and J2 is closely associated with the Fertile Crescent.[137][138] The mitochondrial DNA of the Ingush differs from other Caucasian populations and the rest of the world. "The Caucasus populations exhibit, on average, less variability than other [World] populations for the eight Alu insertion polymorphisms analyzed here. The average heterozygosity is less than that of any other region of the world, with the exception of Sahul. Within the Caucasus, the Ingush have much lower levels of variability than any of the other populations. The Ingush also showed unusual patterns of mtDNA variation when compared with other Caucasus populations (Nasidze and Stoneking, submitted), which indicates that some feature of the Ingush population history, or of this particular sample of the Ingush, must be responsible for their different patterns of genetic variation at both mtDNA and the Alu insertion loci."[139][140]

List of Ingush people

Ingushetia

News and History of Ingushetia

The Ingush people