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View Full Version : Dirty war rages on Russia's doorstep



bobdina
09-21-2009, 01:06 PM
WHEN Arsen Butayev was seized on a street in broad daylight last month and held captive with four other men, including his younger brother, he must have known a terrible fate awaited them. The witnesses to his abduction knew it too. Nobody intervened.

Butayev, 23, and his comrades had fallen into the hands of a death squad operated by the security services in Dagestan, a small, mountainous republic of 3m souls riven by growing conflict in the southernmost part of Russia.

In Dagestan — it means “the country of mountains” — such abductions follow a pattern as grim as it is familiar. The men were bundled away at gunpoint in the capital, Makhachkala. First their heads were covered with hoods. Then they were driven to an interrogation centre to be tortured as suspected Islamic militants.

They were beaten. One was subjected to a mock hanging, another to electric shocks. Finally, like other young men before them, they were taken to a wood, bruised, bewildered and terrified.

There, they were bound with duct tape and placed inside a car that had been wired with explosives and doused in petrol. Their captors sprayed chloroform into their hoods and abruptly departed. The men, who have never been charged with any crime, were left waiting to be blown to bits.

It is usual for the security forces to claim that terrorist bombers have inadvertently triggered their device before they were able to plant it.

On this occasion, however, Butayev and his friend Islam Askerov, 21, were not rendered helpless by the chloroform. They freed themselves, removed the explosives and placed them in a nearby field. But they were unable to wake the rest of the group before the death squad returned. They fled, leaving Butayev’s 22-year-old brother Artur and the other two behind. Days later, the three men were found dead at another spot, their bodies charred. The survivors are still hiding.

Their ordeal is described in witness statements which suggest that local police, backed by Russian special forces, are behind the death squads.

The incident illustrates the brutality of an underground war that is being waged in the northern Caucasus region, encompassing Chechnya and its neighbouring republics of Ingushetia and Dagestan.

On one side are Muslim extremists who want to break away from Moscow’s rule and set up an Islamic state. On the other are the Kremlin-backed forces hell-bent on stopping them. Caught in the middle are countless civilians.

It is unreported in Russia and virtually unnoticed by the rest of the world. Yet just five months after the long war in Chechnya was officially declared to be at an end, the northern Caucasus has seen a big upsurge in violence. Five hundred people have been killed so far this year, double last year’s toll. It has become the Kremlin’s most pressing problem after the economic crisis.

In Chechnya itself, where security forces commanded by its 32-year-old president, Ramzan Kadyrov, have been accused of numerous atrocities, there have been nearly 90 abductions this year. The targets included Natalia Estemirova, a leading human rights campaigner who was kidnapped and murdered in July. Yet the repression has failed to end a wave of suicide bombings. After the latest one last week, Kadyrov claimed that security in Chechnya was improving. “Yes, they bomb,” he said. “And in London they bomb and in America — everywhere they bomb. We have cornered the bandits and soon we’ll finish them off.”

In Ingushetia, a suicide bomber drove a lorry packed with explosives into a police station last month, killing 20 people. A car bomb nearly killed Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, the republic’s president, in June. Still recovering, Yevkurov has admitted he cannot guarantee anyone’s security.

Following that attack, the Kremlin permitted Kadyrov’s security forces to carry out counter-terrorism operations inside Ingushetia. Reports of kidnapping and extrajudicial killing swiftly followed.

“Violence is spreading across the entire region,” said one former Kremlin adviser. “It’s embarrassing but above all it’s alarming because clearly the heavy-handed tactics used so far are not working.”
In Dagestan, home to more than 50 ethnic groups, clan warfare and bitter political rivalries have compounded internal conflict. The interior minister responsible for security, Adilgerei Magomedtagirov, was killed by a sniper as he attended a wedding in June. Two dozen policemen have been murdered in the past year.

Russian special forces carry out almost daily raids against those they suspect of being Islamic terrorists. Earlier this month Sirazhudin Umarov, 32, was kidnapped by masked men after being summoned to a meeting with a policeman. The following day his badly mutilated body was discovered. The security forces claim he had been killed in an anti-terrorist raid.

“His face was so badly smashed from beating that I had difficulty recognising him,” said Gulbenis Badurova, 33, his wife. “His eye was missing and both hands had been broken. ”

In June the death squads came for Ulyan Umbatov, 50, and his son Khakim, 24. The two were kidnapped after leaving home to attend prayers. Their bodies were found in a burnt-out car. The police claim they were terrorists killed by their own explosives, and there were no witnesses to challenge the official version.

In contrast, on September 9, dozens of onlookers watched masked men abduct Rashid Gasanov, 27, a bus driver and father of two, in Makhachkala.

Gasanov, whose elder brother joined Islamic militants seven years ago, is not believed to have any links to radical groups himself. But he had previously been held several times by police seeking information on his brother and had once nearly choked to death when a plastic bag was taped over his head.

“The other times we were always able to find out where he was being held,” said Gasanov’s wife, Subigat. “This time we couldn’t find out anything. We’ve no idea where he’s being held and what he’s being put through. All I can do is pray that he’ll be returned to us alive, but I live in fear that he is already dead.”

Deadly widows

THE surge in violence across the Caucasus has seen a return of female suicide bombers known as “the black widows”.

Their name refers to the loss of a husband or brother for whom they seek revenge in the war between rebels and Russian-backed forces.

A week ago a young woman carrying grenades and a semi-automatic pistol was arrested in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan. Her two brothers are thought to have been killed by the security forces. Police said she was preparing a suicide attack.

In neighbouring Chechnya, a female suicide bomber blew herself up beside a police car in the capital, Grozny, last week, killing herself and injuring two officers.

Islamic militants used women as human bombs in the Moscow theatre siege in 2002.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6841296.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2

ghost
09-21-2009, 01:47 PM
Thanks for sharing. It was a good read. Doesn't really surprise me, though. During last year's skirmish between Georgia and Russia, both sides were witnessed using these "dirty tactics". The Russians leveled entire city blocks, and the Georgians did the same. And no one says anything about this, not even a whisper. But as soon as something happens in Afghanistan or Iraq, where a "civilian" was shot and killed by Coalition forces, then everyone is an expert on the subject....

nastyleg
09-21-2009, 02:54 PM
Thanks for sharing. It was a good read. Doesn't really surprise me, though. During last year's skirmish between Georgia and Russia, both sides were witnessed using these "dirty tactics". The Russians leveled entire city blocks, and the Georgians did the same. And no one says anything about this, not even a whisper. But as soon as something happens in Afghanistan or Iraq, where a "civilian" was shot and killed by Coalition forces, then everyone is an expert on the subject....

you hit the nail on the head.

Toki
09-21-2009, 02:57 PM
Thanks for sharing. It was a good read. Doesn't really surprise me, though. During last year's skirmish between Georgia and Russia, both sides were witnessed using these "dirty tactics". The Russians leveled entire city blocks, and the Georgians did the same. And no one says anything about this, not even a whisper. But as soon as something happens in Afghanistan or Iraq, where a "civilian" was shot and killed by Coalition forces, then everyone is an expert on the subject....

That's because we are seen as the better, well trained, and well mannered military. Everyone know what Russia does during wars.

bobdina
09-21-2009, 04:01 PM
That's because we are seen as the better, well trained, and well mannered military. Everyone know what Russia does during wars.

Yes we are, but it's still a fact the worlds media doesn't blame them or call for heads to roll when they do fucked up shit. The media is supposed to be balanced and fair yet we (U.S.) are the only ones getting constantly criticized for shit even when we go way to the extreme to reduce civilian casualties to the extent many of our soldiers are dead or maimed. Totally wrong, if it's good for the goose it's good for the gander <-- used to hear my mom say that, first time I have.

GTFPDQ
09-21-2009, 04:54 PM
National mind set. Outside view of that mindset never changes. Russia can punch first, apologise if it feels like it.