23.7.2004

Increased Security Measures in Chechnya

CHECHNYA, Grozny. (InformCenter SNО). Since the morning of July 20th, Russian soldiers have blocked off the region of the Hippodrome stop in Grozny. They have installed heavily armed troops on the streets, surrounded the private sector in the area, and begun a general check of the houses and documents of people living there. There is no information available about those arrested as a result of the operation. In addition, in the last few days, soldiers and their partners in the local power structure have strengthend their positions around Grozny and other Chechen settlements. Military checkpoints, especially at entrances to Grozny, have also added armed troops. So-called “mobile checkpoints” are operating on all main highways. The motives for these increased security measures and shows of strength are rumors of insurgent attacks in the near future. However, many local residents beieve that the local powers are spreading these rumors themselves in order to increase the repression
of the republic’s population.

Translated by OM Kenney [2004-07-21-Chech-06]




RFE/RL Sunday, 25 July 2004

Analysis:

Light Shed On Ingush Militants' Motives

By Liz Fuller

On 19 July, the independent ingushetiya.ru website published an update by B. Bagaudinov on the ongoing investigation into the 21-22 June raids on Interior Ministry facilities in Ingushetia that left almost 90 people dead. Four days earlier, on 15 July, Russian Prosecutor-General Vladimir Ustinov gave the number of suspects arrested in connections with those coordinated attacks as approximately 30, of whom 20 have been formally charged. Bagaudinov failed to cite the source of his information, which seems plausible, however.

According to Bagaudinov, the majority of the raiders were ethnic Ingush aged 18-25. (On 21 and 22 June, ingushetiya.ru quoted eyewitnesses as saying most of the raiders were very young and spoke Ingush.) But the young men fall into two distinct categories. The first, more radical group comprises those young men who left home to fight in the ranks of the Chechen resistance and won their Chechen co-militants' respect. The second group includes young men from "normal" Ingush families who, frustrated by poverty and the lack of employment and alienated by widespread official corruption, turned to Islam as a vehicle for "the moral salvation of the nation." As a result, some of them were abducted and killed by the Ingush authorities on the mistaken assumption that they were "Wahhabis," even though, as Bagaudinov stressed, "they had no ties with the militants and did not try to split [Ingush] society."

Bagaudinov claimed that the two groups would never have made common cause were it not for the lawlessness unleashed on Ingushetia by the Federal Security Service (FSB). But then, in an implicit contradiction, Bagaudinov said that the Chechen resistance registered the mass alienation of the population of Ingushetia, and resolved to make use of it for their own ends. He claimed that early this year the Chechens sent emissaries into Ingushetia -- Ingush who had fought in the Chechen ranks -- to recruit such disaffected young men, who during April-May were trained in basic military skills in camps on Ingush territory that the FSB somehow failed to detect. Bagaudinov identified radical Chechen field commander Shamil Basaev as the mastermind behind the raids into Ingushetia. The website quoted eyewitnesses of the raid as saying young participants claimed that Basaev was their commander. And RFE/RL's North Caucasus Service pointed out that there are no Ingush field commanders with the
experience and tactical knowledge to plan and launch such a complex operation. Only Basaev, Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov (who has disclaimed responsibility), and a couple of other Chechen field commanders would have been capable of doing so. Eyewitnesses of the raid said young participants claimed that Basaev was their commander.


Bagaudinov estimated the number of raiders as approximately 300 Ingush, 30 Chechens, and 10 members of other North Caucasus ethnic groups, including one Ossetian. He claimed that "the investigation has established that it was primarily the Ingush who bear responsibility for the killings." After the raid, the "radicals" and accompanying Chechens retreated to the mountains, while the young Ingush returned to their families: It is primarily these, according to Bagaudinov, who have been detained and arrested.

In an interview published on 21 July in "Nezavisimaya gazeta," former Ingush Mufti Magomed-hadji Albogachiev painted a more detailed picture of the genesis of militant Islam in Ingushetia and the Ingushetian authorities' reaction to it. Albogachiev admitted that the primary reason for his resignation as mufti earlier this month was the lack of trust between himself and Ingushetian President Murat Zyazikov and which made it "difficult" for the two men to work together. But he went on to lambaste Zyazikov for allegedly declining to take resolute steps to counter "extremism" among Ingushetia's Muslims on the grounds that such measures could scare off potential investors.

Albogachiev, who served as mufti for 12 years, claimed that thanks to close cooperation between the senior Muslim clergy and the republic's political leadership, the religious situation was "always very quiet, " to the point that Ingushetia "served as an example to the entire Russian Federation." But the war in Chechnya fueled the rise of what he termed "extremist " religious elements, which the official clergy sought to neutralize. Since Zyazikov's election in April 2002, Albogachiev claimed "Islamic religious organizations whose leaders acquired their education outside the republic have started to be legalized [and] extremist elements and 'dissenting' [raskolnicheskie] mosques have begun to appear." But, he noted, the republic's leadership failed to take any steps to counter the rise of militant Islam.

Neither Bagaudinov nor Albogachiev offered any explanation for the Ingushetian authorities' failure to crack down on militant Islamic groups -- a failure that is all the more incomprehensible in the light of repeated Russian warnings of the dangers such groups pose. Nor did either offer an estimate of how many of Ingushetia's population of 300,000 belong to, or sympathize with, such groups.




Jul 26 2004 1:27PM

House of Chechen village headman attacked

MOSCOW. July 26 (Interfax-South) - Rebels fired a grenade launcher into the house of a Chechen village administration head on Sunday evening, wounding his bodyguard.

The official and his family were unhurt.

Elsewhere in Chechnya, three people including the administration of the village of Samashki, died and one person was wounded in a bomb attack in Achkhoi-Martan district Sunday evening. What is believed to a be a home-made remotely controlled device went off south of Samashki when nearby workers were busy cleaning the riverbed.

An investigating team needed just a few hours to identify suspects in the attack, a source in the Chechen Interior Ministry has told Interfax.

"Steps are being taken to detain them," he said.

Law enforcement agencies and military units kill and detain rebels every day but still more rebels lay down arms voluntarily, Maj. Gen. Ilya Shabalkin, a spokesman for the regional North Caucasus anti- terrorist headquarters, told reporters on Monday. I n particular, militants have surrendered in Shelkovskaya district, the city of Grozny and in Nazran, the capital of the Russian internal republic of Ingushetia bordering Chechnya, he said.

Several militants resisting detention were killed on Sunday, Shabalkin said.

The authorities prevented a set of terror attacks in Chechnya's Kurchaloi district, an official on the Russian Interior Ministry's provisional press center has said.

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Head of Chechen Samashki village administration Hizir Aldamov killed in terrorist act

26.07.2004, 09.31

GROZNY, July 26 (Itar-Tass) - Three people, including head of the Chechen Samashki village administration Hizir Aldamov, died in an act of terror when an explosive device went off in the village of Samashki, Chechnya's Achkhoi-Martan district. One is wounded in the explosion, Chechen police told Itar-Tass on Monday.

The explosion went off when a vehicle carrying cannery workers was passing by the village, heading for the Sunzha River where river bottom cleaning work was planned.

When examining the attack site, police found another explosive device made of a mortar projectile and a plastic bottle filled with explosives.

According to preliminary information, gunmen from Nasipov's group committed the crime. Their names are known.

The gunmen are hiding in the Samashki forest, and they are being searched for.