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Kadyrov says
death squads operate
The Los Angeles Times August 29, 2003
Russia's Chechnya Leader Says Death Squads Operate
By David Holley, Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW — In a sharp preelection turnabout, the Kremlin-appointed
head of Russia's war-torn republic of Chechnya declared Thursday that
death squads associated with security forces were seeking to prolong
the conflict through abductions and terror.
"People continue to go missing in Chechnya. They are taken away in the
middle of the night. Their bodies are not found and they are never seen
again," Akhmad Kadyrov, the republic's acting president,
said in a letter he released to reporters in Grozny, the Chechen capital.
In the letter, addressed to Russia's top law enforcement officials,
Kadyrov added: "I have no doubts that those who are taking people away
at night are the so-called third force, the party of supporters of a
horrible war. Through their crimes, they maintain tension in the republic,
and their hands are stained with the blood of innocent people."
The force is made up of "kidnappers in armored vehicles," he said. "They
are a death squad."
Human rights critics of Moscow's policies in the Caucasus republic have
long complained of the operation of death squads, and many critics of
the war believe it continues in part because some on the Russian side
do not want to see the conflict settled — presumably because they
are profiting from it through various forms of corruption. But to have
Moscow's handpicked strongman suddenly appear
to endorse those views was remarkable.
Russian rights advocates described Kadyrov's declaration as a belated
recognition of the squads' existence and an obvious campaign ploy aimed
at the Oct. 5 Chechen presidential election, in which he is considered
a leading candidate.
The Kremlin's previously firm public support for Kadyrov has weakened
in recent weeks. It was not clear whether his letter marked a form of
lashing back at Moscow and distancing himself from its leaders.
It might instead be a maneuver undertaken with Moscow's permission in
a bid to shore up his waning popularity.
Also, Kadyrov has himself been accused of running death squads, and
the letter has the effect of pointing the finger elsewhere.
By official count, 267 people were abducted in Chechnya in the first
six months of this year, with only five cases solved, said Movsar Khamidov,
Chechnya's first deputy prime minister, in a statement to
the Russian news agency Interfax.
In his letter, Kadyrov called on the federal government to create a
commission to search for the missing and punish the death squad members.
"The main thing is that we should tell the people of Chechnya the truth
and save them from night terror," he said.
Death squads in Chechnya "are not a myth at all," said Tatyana I. Kasatkina,
head of the human rights group Memorial. "They are a very horrible reality.
But there is confusion as to who stands behind these squads. Some believe
it is the federal troops. Some accuse Kadyrov's men of actually acting
as death squads. So I am sure Kadyrov spoke about them only out of political
necessity He has to do and say something unusual to whitewash his dark
image."
Anna Politkovskaya, a political analyst and Chechnya specialist for
the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, said that death squads "have been spreading
terror through the republic for the last three years" but that
Kadyrov "until now bluntly and doggedly denied their presence and sinister
role."
Chechens exercised self-rule after defeating Russian troops in a 1994-96
war, but Russian forces returned in 1999 and have been fighting pro-independence
guerrillas since.
Courts based on Muslim religious law functioned in the republic during
its period of self-rule. At the time, Kadyrov was Chechnya's top religious
leader. Only since 2000 has he been more associated with pro-Russian
policies than with Chechnya's independence struggle, and many observers
in Moscow say the Kremlin cannot trust him to remain on its side.
The squads in Chechnya were originally formed by Russian military intelligence
to kill rebels and criminals without taking them to trial, Politkovskaya
said.
"Now for at least a year, many people in Chechnya believe that Kadyrov's
security force is responsible for a lot of deaths and kidnappings,"
she said. "They take advantage of the situation in the republic to settle
their scores of all kinds with Kadyrov's enemies or political opponents."
It is obvious that Kadyrov's letter was not prompted by new information,
Politkovskaya said.
"What could have happened overnight to become an eye-opener for him?"
she said. "This statement is nothing but an awkward and all too obvious
campaign move. He is quite panicky now, and he is dead worried that
the Kremlin might ditch him."
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Times staff writer Sergei L. Loiko contributed to this report.
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