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Indybay Feature

Moscow reaps the Chechen whirlwind

by repost:Guardian
Jonathan Steele
Thursday October 24, 2002
The Guardian
Theatre attack brings home failure of Kremlin strategy
The hostage-seizure of hundreds of theatre-goers in a Moscow suburb last night is a grim reminder to the Kremlin of how badly its hardline policies in Chechnya have failed since the republic first declared independence as the Soviet Union stumbled to its end.
After two invasions by Russian troops and several earlier hostage seizures by Chechens, no solution is in sight.

It is eleven years since Chechnya's leaders caught the spirit of defiance which was prompting the Baltic and other Soviet republics to go their separate ways. But Chechnya was unusual in that it was not a Soviet republic but part of Russia itself.

Although the last Soviet president, Mikhail Gorbachev, accepted the end of the empire, Boris Yeltsin, the first president of the new Russia, was not willing to see his own multi-ethnic Russian Federation disintegrate in the same way.

His main tactic against the Chechens and their leader, Dzhokar Dudayev, was to use economic sanctions to try to isolate the small oil-rich region on the northern slopes of the Caucasus and bring it to heel.

When this failed, Mr Yeltsin took the disastrous decision to send troops into Chechnya in 1994. His advisers told him it would be a simple operation which would succeed within days rather than weeks.

He forgot, or was not aware, that the Chechens had always been some of the most rebellious peoples in the federation. They resented their conquest by Russian troops in the nineteenth century, but their biggest grievance was Stalin's brutal policy of deporting the entire population to central Asia in 1944. They were allowed back by Nikita Khrushchev in 1956.

The arrival of Russian troops, coupled with their poor discipline and brutal tactics, revived all the old bitterness. Resistance was intense. Most Chechens are Muslim, but their defiance was based on national pride rather than religion.

Massive and indiscriminate Russian bombardment devastated the capital, Grozny, and levelled scores of blocks of flats. Tens of thousands died. Russian forces regained most lowland areas in 1995, but the guerrillas held their ground in the mountainous south.

They also took the struggle to Russia itself, with hostage-seizures in southern Russia. In 1996 Alexander Lebed, a Russian commander from the Afghan war, who had been appointed by Mr Yeltsin to handle the crisis, persuaded the Kremlin to withdraw its troops. The Russians signed a ceasefire with the Chechens, leaving them with de facto autonomy but no formal independence.

Aslan Maskhadov, the chief of staff of the Chechen forces, was elected president early in 1997. War and isolation had turned Chechnya into a "failed state" in which armed groups vied for control, using banditry and hostage-taking of other Chechens as well as foreigners.

A new crisis erupted in August 1999 when a small group of Islamic militants invaded the neighbouring republic of Dagestan from Chechnya. Russian forces again used artillery and air power to try to dislodge them.

Then came a series of terrorist bombings of blocks of flats in southern Russia and later in Moscow itself. More than 300 people died and the political temperature soared. Chechens were never proved to have planted the bombs, and many Russians suspected the Kremlin's security forces were responsible.

Vladimir Putin, newly appointed as prime minister by Mr Yeltsin, decided to send troops into Chechnya again. In spite of Russia's defeat two years earlier, the move was popular among Russians who were reeling from the wave of terrorist acts.

The Chechen crisis became the dominant theme in the parliamentary election in December 1999, knocking Mr Yeltsin's poor economic record off the headlines and allowing Mr Putin's allies to become the main political force. He easily won election to the presidency three months later.

While Mr Putin benefited politically from the Chechen crisis, his troops fared as badly as they had in the first war. Almost three years after the re-invasion of 1999, they are still bogged down in the republic.

Although Mr Putin has repeatedly claimed the war is over, the fighting has been intense in recent weeks. In August, the rebels shot down a Russian military helicopter, killing 116 people.

Tens of thousands of Chechens have been forced to flee into the neighbouring republic of Ingushetia where they live in appalling conditions. The large Russian population has also fled.

Various international efforts to persuade Mr Putin to accept Mr Maskhadov's call for negotiations have come to nothing, further increasing Chechen determination to fight on.

The Russian president was quick to try to exploit President Bush's "war on terrorism", saying they were the first victims of Islamic fundamentalism.

Officials described the Moscow bombings as their own September 11. Western criticism of Russian tactics in Chechnya became muted, and the Kremlin felt strengthened in its refusal to negotiate.
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by links
These sites are so busy they dont seem to be up that much but from what I can see they are the source of information for most of whats happening right now:

English (updated every few hours)
http://www.kavkaz.org/eng/

Russian (updated alot more often)
http://www.kavkaz.org/russ/

Russian To English Translation Page:
http://www.translate.ru/eng/srvurl.asp
by kavkaz repost
Protest demonstration of Chechen refugees in Baku

Sources of Kavkaz Center inform that in Baku in the morning on Thursday, Chechen refugees living in Azerbaijan, organized a big protest demonstration in support of the demands of Chechen mujahideen to stop war immediately and to withdraw Russian invaders from Chechnya. Refugees are demanding for an end to massacre of peaceful citizens and beginning of political negotiations

2002-10-24 12:06:33

Mujahideen set free 8 people - 3 children and 5 women

Assistant to Movsar Barayev rang into editorial staff of Kavkaz Center and informed that 8 people -three remaining children and five women were released at about 11 AM. Furthermore preparations are made to release 10 foreigners, whose citizenship has been established genuinely. He also told that Movsar Barayev - commander of the Chechen subdivision, invited the ambassadors of foreign states for confirming the identities of the held people, who might be foreign citizens.

2002-10-24 11:34:21

Mujahideen expressed their readiness to release foreigners

Assistant to Movsar Barayev stated in the telephonic interview with Kavkaz Center at approximately 10 AM Moscow time that they are making preparations to set free 30 foreigners and warned Russian command not to shoot the released hostages.

No contact been made until now

Movsar Barayev reported to Kavkaz Center that General Aslakhanov gave him a phone number of the Russian official that Barayev should contact the official on this number. He tried to dial up this number and made a call but could not access the concerned official.

Mujahideen threw grenade into empty room

Agency Kavkaz Center for a short period was contacted by assistant of Movsar Barayev and reported that the explosion really occurred in the building of the House of Culture. The reason for explosion was the grenade been thrown by Mujahideen into one of the empty rooms of the building for preventive measures. There are no casualties.

2002-10-24 10:47:32

Militiaman has been killed

Assistant of Movsar Barayev rang into editorial staff of Kavkaz Center and reported that at approximately 6 o'clock in the morning was killed one of the militiamen, who approached the central entrance of the House of Culture under the guise of a drunken person and asked to enter. After several warnings, mujahideen shot dead the militiaman.

2002-10-24 07:08:19

No body contacted

The commander of the Islamic Regiment of the Special Task Force Movsar Barayev stated in a telephonic interview with Kavkaz Center that none of the Russian representatives contacted mujahideen at 5:30 AM Moscow time, without considering General Aslakhanov. According to Movsar Barayev, the situation is under full control of Chechen soldiers. He again stated that the only possible way to save the lives of more than thousand people is the curtailment of the carnage of Chechen people, the end to war and withdrawal of invaders from the territory of the independent Chechen state.

2002-10-24 05:48:35

Responsibility for the prevailing situation completely lies on Kremlin

STATEMENT OF NIKOLAI KHRAMOV, CHAIRMAN OF THE COORDINATION COMMITTEE OF THE RUSSIAN RADICALS

Responsibility for the prevailing situation in the final analysis completely lies on the Kremlin, which continues its colonial war in Chechnya, and is accompanied by daily seizures of hostages by "unidentified federals", tortures, executions - entire nightmare, about which Russian press does not speak practically and does not desire to let the Russian public know it. The fact that neither members of the government of Maskhadov nor state information agency "Chechenpress" have any detailed information about the seizure of hostages, except those that are published by Mass Media and "Kavkaz Center", it forces us as before to be lost in the guesses, who are these people, who represent themselves as "Chechen suicide attackers of 29th division of Movsar Barayev", and took in hostages several hundred spectators of music "North-East". However, regardless of the fact that who are the hostage-takers in Moscow, the demand, declared by them must be fulfilled without delay: criminal war in Chechnya must be ended immediately. For this are necessary instant negotiations between the lawfully chosen President of Russia Vladimir Putin and the lawfully chosen President of Chechnya, Aslan Maskhadov. This demand must be fulfilled not only for rescuing of thousands of unhappy spectators in the center of "Dubrovka", not only for the rescuing of Chechnya and its citizens, but also for the rescuing of Russia itself.

2002-10-24 05:31:11

Zakayev issued a statement

The special representative of the President of CRI A. Zakayev declares that he does not so far have reliable information available about the events happening in Moscow. If it is confirmed that the theater is actually seized by Chechens, then this should be considered as the gesture of extreme desperation, informs Chechenpress. The seizure of civilians in Moscow, in the capital of aggressor country - is the consequence of the mass, goal-directed killing of civilian population not only in the capital, but also in all populated areas of the country of victim. With any outcome of incident, entire responsibility lies on those, who unleashed criminal war against the Chechen people. A. Zakayev emphasizes that he with the anxiety is watching on the development of situation.

A similar statement was issued by minister of public health of CRI, U. Khanbiyev, who emphasized that Chechen issue can not be solved by use of force!

"All that is happening today is the result of that policy, which is conducted by Kremlin in Chechnya. Already since four years, war is going on in Chechnya. The only difference - that the hostages in the theater "Dubrovka" still have a chance to remain alive, if Putin has sympathy for his citizens. But these chances never were given to Chechen hostages in Chechnya. Each Chechen, who was taken as a hostage by Russian troops in Chechnya in last four years, experienced on himself all those tortures of Russian terrorists. These Chechens today cannot be expected something else, except feeling and sympathy for the hostages. And now this is the time for all of us already to think that there is no solution to the Chechen question by means of power, they must understand this in Moscow also".

2002-10-24 05:01:32

30 foreigners in the building of the House of Culture

Assistants of Movsar Barayev contacted on phone with agency Kavkaz Center and reported that about 30 foreigners were found after thorough checking in the building of the House of Culture.

2002-10-24 04:50:45

Mujahideen shot dead a female employee of FSB

Assistants of Movsar Barayev contacted "Kavkaz Center" news agency at approximately 4 A.M. Moscow time and informed that a young woman entered into the building of House of Culture despite the fact that she was warned not to enter. In spite of warning, the young woman impudently entered into the hall, declaring, "And what can you do to me?.....". Mujahideen warned her again that she must leave the building immediately. However, the woman did not react to the words of soldiers. Having information about the tactics of FSB, mujahideen understood that the woman entered for the purpose of collecting information. Considering the seriousness of prevailing situation, it was decided to shoot the young woman.


2002-10-24 04:07:37

Mujahideen declared that they are ready to receive Kadyrov

Chechen mujahideen announced that they were ready to receive Kadyrov and similarly expressed their readiness to release 50 to 100 people in exchange for his arrival. One of the Chechen soldiers in his telephonic conversation with correspondent of Kavkaz Center stated, "If Putin wants to save 50 lives of his citizens, let him send Kadyrov for negotiations with us".

2002-10-24 03:14:37


All will be killed, if there is an attempt of storm

Chechen commander Movsar Barayev said in the telephonic talk with Kavkaz Center news agency that the mined building will be exploded and all will be killed, if an attempt of storm on the building will be undertaken. "Here are more than one thousand people. No one will leave alive and will be killed along with us, if there will be an attempt of assault", emphasized Barayev. He informed that, mujahideen, among whom, according to specified data, are 20 widows of Chechen soldiers, came to Moscow not to play games, but decided to fight and die on the land of enemy. "If Putin and his gang want to preserve the lives of his citizens, then they will stop war and will remove their forces from Chechnya", stated Barayev

2002-10-24 02:34:14


None of the hostages injured

The commander of the Islamic Regiment of Special Task Force, Movsar Barayev stated in a telephonic interview with Kavkaz Center news agency that none of the hostages was injured. He refuted the information that mujahideen let out only Moslems and children. "We freed all citizens of other states except citizens of RF and released the children also. We don't have claims on other countries and we do not want to wage war with them", stated Barayev. He also told that General Aslakhanov contacted him on phone and proposed Ruslan Khasbulatov as negotiator. But mujahideen rejected this proposal, after stating that Khasbulatov is responsible for the bloodshed of Chechen people. Barayev similarly informed that there was no exchange of fire in the building of the House of Culture. As earlier, the demand is one - curtailment of the massacre of Chechen people, termination of combat operations and withdrawal of Russian invaders.

2002-10-24 00:49:45


Moscow under attack by Chechen suicide bombers!!!....

Movsar Barayev contacted «Kavkaz Center» news agency and informed that Chechen mujahideen took 1000 persons as hostages in a theater in Moscow. Movsar Barayev is commanding the Chechen group. According to him, his team consists of 40 widows in addition to a number of Chechen soldiers. Building has been mined. All participants in the operation are equipped with grenades and mines. Movsar Barayev stated that those who attacked Moscow are suicide bombers. The demand is only one - curtailment of war and beginning of immediate withdrawal of Russian aggressors from Chechnya… Barayev announced that Chechen mujahideen arrived in Moscow not to survive, but to die. He also informed that all children, who were present in the building of theater, have been released.......Agency is in contact with Mujahideen and is pursuing the events.

2002-10-24 00:24:17

by the hostage takers are online?
chechens_online.jpg
by ...........
The Chechen rebels habve a website (http://www.kavkaz.org) and I'm reasonably sure they are in communication with those inside. It is reported that they are equipped with 'mobile phones' so this could mean satellite phones, possibly they could also have wireless internet of some form.
30/10/2000

RUSSIAN FEDERATION
What future for Chechens - citizens or a subjugated people?
An appeal to the participating governments of the
European Union - Russia summit to end continuing grave human rights violations and impunity in Chechnya.

Amnesty International calls upon the governments of the participating states of the European Union - Russian Federation summit meeting taking place in Paris today to take concerted, effective and sustained action to bring to a halt the continuing crisis of human rights violations in Chechnya and those inflicted on Chechens in other parts of Russia.

Amnesty International urges the European Union to take effective action on the situation of Chechnya and Chechens which is commensurate with the standards espoused in the European Union Presidency Conclusions reached at the Santa Maria da Feira European Council meeting of 19 and 20 June 2000, which stated that: ''A strong and healthy partnership must be maintained between the Union and Russia and must be based on common values, notably respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms''; and which called ''on Russia to meet its commitments and obligations concerning the continuing conflict in Chechnya'', including, inter alia: ''[A]voiding the excessive use of force'' and ''[E]ffective independent investigation into human rights abuses''.

Effective action must include:

New measures employing appropriate instruments of the international human rights system to reinforce the European Union's previous initiative, an April 2000 United Nations Commission on Human Rights Resolution which the Russian authorities are currently failing to implement in its key provisions. New measures are urgently required to ensure that effective independent investigation into human rights abuses is undertaken and that the perpetrators are brought to justice;
European Union recognition of and engagement in monitoring and resolving the wider ongoing human rights crisis affecting Chechens throughout the Russian Federation: patterns of persecution, discrimination and arbitrary measures which have reduced Chechens to a status beneath the law, unable to avail themselves of the human rights protection to which Russia's international obligations entitle them. The European Union should call for and assist the establishement of an independent commission or ombudsman office with the powers and resources to conduct independent investigations into alleged patterns, practices or instances of persecution, discrimination, or arbitrary measures exercised against Chechens, and to restore to Chechens the full range of human rights protection.

more...
http://web.amnesty.org/802568F7005C4453/0/104D647F072AE3428025698300532954?Open&Highlight=2,Chechen


by info
History
Recognized as a distinct people since the 17th cent., the Chechens were the most active opponents of Russia's conquest (1818–1917) of the Caucasus. They fought bitterly during an unsuccessful 1850s rebellion led by Imam Shamyl. The Bolsheviks seized the region in 1918 but were dislodged in 1919 by counterrevolutionary forces under Gen. A. I. Denikin.

After Soviet rule was reestablished, the area was included in 1921 in the Mountain People's Republic. The Chechen Autonomous Region was created in 1922, and in 1934 it became part of the Chechen-Ingush Region, made a republic in 1936. After Chechen and Ingush units collaborated with the invading Germans during World War II, many residents were deported (1944) to Central Asia. Deportees were repatriated in 1956, and the republic was reestablished in 1957.

In 1991, as the Soviet Union disintegrated, the Chechen-dominated parliament of the republic declared independence as the Republic of Ichkeria, soon better known as Chechnya. In June, 1992, Russia granted Ingush inhabitants their own republic (Ingushetia) in the western fifth of the territory.

Tensions between the Russian government and that of Chechen president Dzhokhar Dudayev escalated into warfare in late 1994, as Russian troops arrived to crush the separatist movement. Grozny was devastated in the fighting, and tens of thousands died. Russian forces regained control of many areas in 1995, but separatist guerrillas controlled much of the mountainous south and committed spectacular terrorist actions in other parts of Russia. Fighting continued through 1996, when Dudayev was killed and succeeded by Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev. The Russians withdrew, essentially admitting defeat, following a cease-fire that left Chechnya with de facto autonomy.

Aslan Maskhadov, chief of staff of the Chechen forces, was elected president early in 1997 but appeared to have little control over the republic. In 1999, Islamic law was established. Terrorism, including a series of bombings in Moscow, erupted again, and after Islamic militants invaded neighboring Dagestan from Chechnya, Russian forces bombed and invaded Chechnya.

by ?
Russia's actions in Chechnya have been among the worst human rights violation of the last 10 years (block to block destruction of blocks in Grozny with fuel air explosives, mass executions etc..)

But where was international public opinion?

Amnesty International made some noise but Chechnya has no obvious interest groups to defend it in the West. While there are activist groups that focus on Africa, China, South Asia etc... Chechnya falls outside of the neat lines that have been drawn up to divide world cultures. No matter how bad the fighting got, nobody cared.

Should anyone be surprised that Chechens now feel the need to go to extremes. For anyone following the Chechen conflict, this hostage situation does not seem particularly surprising; things have been escalating in recent weeks.

Russia wont pull of of Chechnya, and the hostage takers will probably kill hundreds in a mass suicide (with around 40 attackers thats a larger suicide attack than 9/11). Why would anyone give their life for a political cause like this ? The situation in Chechnya is far worse than that in Palestine and the attackers probably dont feel like they have much of a life anyways. The world has ignored them and they are willing to kill hundreds and die even for a small amount of attention.
by .........
What's truly unfortunate is that the world, activist community included, is proving to these people that this is the ONLY way to get attention.
by Carlos
Realistically, Russia isn't going to let go of Chechnya, no matter what the right thing to do is. I don't see a way out for the 700+ bystanders...
The world's powers are paying for carving up the borders as they did decades and centuries ago. No, not the powers, their equally controlled subjects. I don't know why I bother hoping for anything better.
by ..............
You should. It has happened before that the people have defeated the powers. If only briefly. What matters is that it can be done, and even for a time, works. Without the civilizing influence that the people have made today we would be living as serfs under feudal dictators. Those people for many centuries also threw up their hands in despair, but eventually they had had enough, and made the elite pay. Though the efforts of the people are reversed at times, it is not in the interest of the people to give up. The more we fight back, the more civilization has advanced. Some day, if we fight hard enough and long enough, the logical outcome of the increasing power of the people through history is that the people will have total control. This is not speculation. This is a simple enough observation to make, that since Socrates first suggested the ideal of a person following what they know to be true and right, the human condition has improved and the power of authority has been on the wane.
by repost from Moscow Times
Is This the Beginning of the End for Putin?

By Boris Kagarlitsky

President Vladimir Putin's rule started with the Moscow apartment bombings in 1999 and with his promises to establish order in the country. Many Russian citizens saw in Putin the embodiment of their dream of a trustworthy state and a firm hand. Order and security were to be attained no matter what the cost, while human rights and freedom of speech were put on the back burner or completely forgotten.

Today, Putin is up against the most serious crisis of his presidency. The group of gunmen who seized the "Nord Ost" theater in Moscow have dealt the Kremlin regime a blow straight to the heart. Putin promised security, but three years after he came to power, fully armed gunmen in Chechen uniform were able to ride unhindered around the capital in jeeps and seize hundreds of hostages. He promised order, but his law enforcement agencies and military demonstrate total powerlessness.

One could state that the "counter-terrorist operation" conducted in Chechnya over the past three years has been a complete flop. But that would be untrue, because there was never any attempt to conduct a counter-terrorist operation in Chechnya. It hasn't even been a war, but rather a brutal and senseless pogrom.

In the Kremlin, it has long been understood that the Chechen war cannot be won -- however it could be forgotten. One could pretend that the problem was not being dealt with because it did not exist and then convince everyone else that was the case. But reality always gets its own back. The Kremlin won the information battle, by silencing its critics and forcing the mass media to keep quiet about what was actually going on in Chechnya. However, having won that battle, it lost the war. The belief in the omnipotence of propaganda resulted in political impotence.

The reality of the Chechen tragedy burst into the political life of the country in the most brutal manner: The war came to Moscow, ripping through all information barriers and impediments. I mean war and not terrorism. You can condemn the gunmen as much as you like, but it would be bare-faced hypocrisy to omit that the federal army in Chechnya behaves itself considerably worse than the Chechens who seized the theater.

How many people in Chechnya have disappeared without a trace in the past three years? How many cities and villages have been destroyed? How many people have been forced to abandon their homes because life was made unbearable for them? It is the federal army that over the three years: abducted and killed Chechens; systematically pillaged and destroyed peaceful villages; has been terrorizing innocent people. And it is they who bear most of the responsibility for what has now happened. If you are looking for terrorists, you could do worse than to start the search in the Kremlin.

Terrified politicians continue to mutter the mantra that you cannot negotiate with terrorists. But all the experience of the two Chechen wars points to the opposite. First, Moscow declares all moderate Chechen politicians, all those with whom an agreement could have been reached, to be terrorists. And then when radical elements actually do come to the fore and when the Chechen side starts to resort to terrorist methods, the leadership in Moscow caves in and starts to negotiate. That was the case with Budyonnovsk and it seems to be repeating itself before our very eyes.

By rejecting a political resolution and wagering on force alone, the federal authorities condemned themselves to failure. Chechen leaders are not so strong politically, but Chechen fighters are prepared to fight to the last man. Unlike Russian generals, they are ready to die. And for that reason they will never be defeated by the use of force.

The seizure of the theater is seen as proof of the impotence of the federal security services, law enforcement agencies and military. Although, one could equally argue that it is proof of their strength, as the Chechen operation bears the hallmarks of Russian training. It was Russian specialists that prepared Chechen special forces for war in Abkhazia. It would seem that the Chechens were fast learners. Also, no matter how well prepared the gunmen were, the question arises of how they could have carried out such a large-scale operation in the center of the capital without the support of influential individuals. This is something that comes to mind to anyone who knows about the constant problems from the police experienced in Moscow by people "of Caucasian extraction."

With this new terrorist act in Moscow, the sun is starting to set on Putin's rule. Let's leave analysis of the various versions of this event to the conspiracy theorists. However, its consequences will be no less dramatic than those in 1999.

Boris Kagarlitsky is a Moscow-based sociologist.

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