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| Channel Title: Kavkazcenter.com
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| Channel Website: http://www.kavkazcenter.com/
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Channel Description: Latest events in section "Caucasus" from Kavkaz-Center
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| New York Times: Chronicles of the murder of Chechen refugee Israilov by Kadyrov's killers in Vienna |
| The New York Times in its article entitled "Investigation links critic's death to top Chechens" published an extensive journalistic survey of its Vienna correspondent Charles J. Chivers, devoted to Israilov's case. We are publishing the article in full:
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Umar S. Israilov, a whistleblower living in hiding after accusing Chechnya's president of personally participating in torture, kidnapping and murder, was gunned down here last year as he stepped from a grocery store with yogurt, eggs and bags of M&M's and Gummi Bears for his three young children.
The president of the Russian republic of Chechnya, Ramzan A. Kadyrov, who has suppressed a separatist insurgency with harsh methods and unwavering Kremlin backing, vigorously denied any knowledge of Mr. Israilov, one of his former bodyguards, or of his death.
But a 15-month Austrian investigation into the crime has uncovered links between the suspected killers and one of Kadyrov's close advisers, a one-legged former rebel (Shaa Turlayev - KC) who has been described, in unrelated allegations in Russia, as an organizer of Kadyrov's dirty work.
It has also shown how the brutal rules of a place like Chechnya can reach from the Caucasus into Western Europe, where Mr. Israilov found refuge. Federal counterterrorism investigators here unraveled a plot with bungling, panicky Chechen hit men frantically talking on their cellphones - including placing a call to Kadyrov's adviser in Russia, Shaa Turlayev, while trying to escape. Before the killing, two of these men also met in Austria with Mr. Turlayev, a copy of whose passport was found in the getaway car.
The new evidence raises questions about Kadyrov's denial and whether Chechnya's president or government played a direct role in the killing, one of a string of contract-style slayings - in Chechnya, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Moscow, Europe and the Middle East - that have silenced the Chechen president's critics or rivals. These killings have left the impression that Kadyrov, whose rise and hold on power has been nurtured by Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, stands above any government's law.
Mr. Israilov, who was 27, was a combatant in the ugly separatist war in Chechnya and was accused of engaging in violence himself. But in the end, he played by Europe's rules: he had received asylum in Austria and was taking his evidence against Kadyrov to the European Court of Human Rights. He was attacked in broad daylight on a public street by killers who stopped traffic in Austria's capital.
Austrian prosecutors say they will announce indictments in the case soon, perhaps within weeks. Any evidence suggesting the involvement of Chechnya's president or government puts Austria in an uncomfortable position, both domestically and diplomatically.
The police work
The case began with routine police work: Otto Kaltenbrunner, 41, now accused of being the local organizer of the Mr. Israilov's killing, was identified after witnesses reported the license plate on a green Volvo that sped away from where the victim lay bleeding on the street. The license plate matched a Volvo that Mr. Kaltenbrunner owned. He was arrested within hours.
The case's implications grew as the police mapped out Mr. Kaltenbrunner's movements and phone calls, which led to the other suspects, according to defense lawyers, Austria's federal prosecutor's office, and a man with access to the investigators' records who asked not to be identified because of security concerns.
Early clues also suggested the killers' circle intersected with the Chechen government: According to the investigators' records, when the police recovered Mr. Kaltenbrunner's car, they found an electronic airline ticket and a copy of the passport of Mr. Turlayev, 37, the Chechen president's close adviser.
The investigation then revealed that two and a half months before the killing, Mr. Turlayev traveled from Moscow to Vienna and was met at the airport by several Chechen men, including at least two who are central suspects in the crime - Lecha Bogatirov and Mr. Kaltenbrunner, who was born in Chechnya in Soviet times.
While in Austria, Mr. Turlayev tried repeatedly to meet Mr. Israilov, his widow said in an interview. When Mr. Turlayev left Austria without meeting him, he was driven back to the airport by the same two men, investigators found. These men, in the days before the crime, bought and activated two cellphone cards, with consecutive numbers, which they used to communicate with each other.
Mr. Bogatirov, 35, is suspected by the authorities of confronting Mr. Israilov minutes after noon on Jan. 13, 2009, as Mr. Israilov stepped from a grocery across from the apartment where he lived with his children and pregnant wife. After Mr. Israilov resisted and ran, the investigation found, Mr. Bogatirov chased and opened fire, shooting him three times with a pistol.
As Mr. Israilov was dying, Mr. Bogatirov and another man who had chased the victim, Turpal Ali Yesherkayev, madly retraced steps toward the store, the investigation found. They tried without success to pull at least one driver from a passing car, and make their escape.
At last they ended up in a Volvo owned by Mr. Kaltenbrunner, who was not present at the killing, the investigation found. A third man, Muslim Dadayev, drove the getaway car; he sped away toward another market, where they ditched the car and Mr. Bogatirov's jacket, and then headed out of the city, first on public transportation and then by taxi, investigators said.
As they fled, they were anything but a picture of collected assassins: they continuously placed and received cellphone calls.
During this time, Mr. Kaltenbrunner, 41, used his new cellphone number to call Mr. Bogatirov's new cellphone number, according to the investigators' account. The call lasted 93 seconds. Immediately after speaking with Mr. Bogatirov, Mr. Kaltenbrunner used the same line to call a Russian cellphone used by Mr. Turlayev.
A short while later, Mr. Kaltenbrunner and Mr. Bogatirov stopped using their new numbers altogether, according to the man with access to the records.
Since 2004, Kadyrov, himself a former rebel fighter and boxer, has transformed the internal Russian republic on the Caucasus' northern slopes from a war-ravaged ruin into a police microstate.
His rule has been accompanied by a building boom and a sharp decline in open fighting, though the war has simmered and occasional terrorist attacks have continued, including a pair of recent suicide bombings in Moscow. But his methods have also drawn charges from associates and human rights groups about personal excesses and a penchant for crime.
Image challenged
Some allegations - including that Kadyrov cavorted with prostitutes in a bathhouse - have challenged the president's self-styled image as a devout Sufi Muslim leading his republic's religious revival. Others - including that Kadyrov shakes down contractors, and diverts state oil sales and money for Chechen redevelopment to his own coffers - have portrayed him as given to graft.
Human rights investigators and the critics who dare to criticize Kadyrov depict a sadist who designed and took part in a campaign of collective punishment to bring Chechnya to heel.
The court documents filed by Mr. Israilov and his father, Sharpuddi Israilov, provided detailed evidence supporting this view.
In complaints to Russian prosecutors and to the European Court of Human Rights, the Israilovs said that Kadyrov, in previous government positions, had instigated a campaign of abductions of suspected separatists and their families, and then personally tortured detainees, including the Israilovs, and ordered killings or was present as detainees were put to death. The court documents, filed in late 2006, included the first formal complaints levied against Kadyrov by an insider from his circle, and appear to have been the first to accuse Kadyrov personally in the human rights court. They also pulled Mr. Israilov into an ever more threatening game.
Mr. Israilov had been a Chechen rebel, was captured, tortured, switched sides under pressure and joined Kadyrov's security apparatus. During his tenure as a security officer, according to statements collected from Chechens by the police, he was feared; he himself had been accused of severely beating Chechen men, including a brother of Mr. Dadayev's.
Ultimately, he broke ranks and fled Russia for Poland. His father was then abducted by members of Kadyrov's police units, the complaints said, and tortured and held for nearly a year. Kadyrov raged and beat him, Sharpuddi Israilov said in interviews with The New York Times, and called Umar and threatened to kill Sharpuddi if Umar did not come home.
Sharpuddi Israilov was released as part of a Ramadan gesture, he said. He fled Russia, too.
Taken together, the complaints sketched the inner workings of busy institutional torture centers, part of a joint Russian-Chechen effort to subdue the separatists through force and collective punishment, and install the Kadyrov family in power. The complaints also described the brutality of one of Kadyrov's closest confidants, Adam Delimkhanov, who since 2007 has been a member of Russia's Duma, the lower house of Parliament.
Delimkhanov, a member of the political party led by Putin, is wanted on an international arrest warrant for his suspected role in ordering the killing in the United Arab Emirates of Sulim B. Yamadayev, a rival of Kadyrov's who was fatally shot in 2009, six weeks after Mr. Israilov was gunned down here.
Before he was killed, Mr. Israilov told the Austrian police that he was a marked man.
In the summer of 2008 he reported that an emissary from Kadyrov had arranged meetings with him and demanded that he drop his legal complaints and return to Chechnya. The man threatened Mr. Israilov's family, he said. The man was subsequently interviewed by Austrian counterterrorism investigators; he told them that Kadyrov maintained a death list of 300 enemies to be killed, and managed a special department responsible for the killings, according to an official summary. The authorities released the man, who returned to Russia. The existence of this list has not been independently confirmed.
In December 2008, Mr. Israilov told the police he was being watched and followed, and asked for protection. The police declined to provide any. A few weeks later, Mr. Israilov was dead. Then the authorities took notice.
The suspects
The Austrian authorities now have three Chechens in custody in the case: Mr. Kaltenbrunner, Mr. Yesherkayev, and Mr. Dadayev, who is accused of monitoring Mr. Israilov's movements in the weeks before the killing and then driving the getaway car.
Prosecutors are now preparing indictments, according to defense lawyers and Gerhard Jarosch, a spokesman for the prosecutors. Mr. Jarosch added that it was too soon to know who would be charged when indictments were made public, perhaps next month. Mr. Israilov's family and supporters hope that Kadyrov will be named, called into account in the West in ways he has not been in Russia.
There is small chance, though, that any suspects in Russia would ever face justice here. Russia has steadfastly refused to extradite citizens implicated in prominent murders abroad.
The investigation is also wrapping up at a time when Chechen political killings have gained attention in ways that have parallels to this case; a Russian newspaper and a video posted on the Internet have both claimed, though not in relation to this case, that Mr. Turlayev arranges the killings of Kadyrov's enemies at the president's request.
The facts in Austria are suggestive but circumstantial. No other whistleblower has stepped forth; two important suspects escaped to Russia; and there is no known star witness for the prosecution.
Instead, there are tantalizing clues. "We know of the connection between Kaltenbrunner and Turlayev," Mr. Jarosch said. "The connection is there."
What is less clear is Mr. Turlayev's precise role, Mr. Jarosch said, or whether Kadyrov played a hand. The three men in custody have largely not cooperated with investigators, he said. And Mr. Bogatirov fled Austria for Russia before he could be detained.
Mr. Jarosch also said it remained possible that Mr. Israilov was killed as part of a dispute between Chechens in exile, as the authorities suggested last year after the killing became a closely watched international case.
Kadyrov, through his staff, declined to be interviewed for this article, but in past interviews with The Times has denied all allegations of involvement in torture or capital crimes.
Mr. Turlayev could not be reached. A call to the phone number that Mr. Kaltenbrunner called immediately after the killing was answered by a man who identified himself as Mr. Turlayev's brother, who said that Mr. Turlayev was in Turkey and unavailable to talk.
Mr. Bogatirov, whose whereabouts are unknown, could not be reached. The lawyer for Mr. Israilov's family declined to comment. Rudi Mayer, the lawyer for Mr. Kaltenbrunner, confirmed that his client called Mr. Turlayev after the shooting, but said that he was innocent. The call was brief - by one account, only 11 seconds - and there is no transcript of what was said. "He placed phone calls, but not about a murder," Mr. Mayer said. "Nobody knows what was spoken."
Lennart Binder, the lawyer for Mr. Dadayev, said he had driven the car, but had not thought he was participating in a murder. Mr. Dadayev had been told, Mr. Binder said, that Mr. Israilov owed someone money. That fits one theory under consideration by prosecutors: that the group planned to abduct Mr. Israilov, and killed him when he fought back and bolted.
"He says that he was told that he is participating in kidnapping Israilov, not in murder." Mr. Binder said in an e-mail message, adding that his client felt he had no choice, under Chechnya's cruel rules, but to participate. "The refusal to cooperate would have endangered the security of relatives in Chechnya."
***
Analytical Department
Kavkaz Center
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| Sabotage in Dagestan: Oil depot blasted |
| According to Russian sources a massive blaze at an oil plant occured in the Caucasus Emirate's Province of Dagestan.
At its fiercest, more than 80 firefighters were battling to contain the inferno which had been raging for two days. At times flames reached up to five stories high.
The nearest populated area is more than 10 kilometers away from the fire site. The oil storage depot is located some 170 kilometers north of the capital, Shamilkala.
The fire broke out in one of the oil tanks, which has a capacity of 5,000 cubic meters. There was reportedly about 3,000 cubic meters of raw oil inside.
According to reports, the blaze may have started because of sabotage from the Caucasus Mujahideen.
Kavkaz Center
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| Saakashvili fears of Russian coup in Georgia |
| In an interview with Time magazine Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili expressed fears that Russia gets unlimited freedom of action on the territories of the former Soviet Union, toppling one after another the democratic governments in neighboring countries.
The Georgian leader does not rule out that Moscow will soon try to overthrow him, journalists believe.
According to the newspaper, Saakashvili feeling lonelier than ever due to the fact that in the past three months two of three regimes, established in the era of "color revolutions", have been ousted. It is about regime change in Ukraine and the overthrow of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in Kyrgyzstan.
Saakashvili in an interview urged the administration of President Barack Obama to prevent Russia in its view affect the former Soviet republics. According to the Georgian leader, Obama has been put in an awkward spot by his drive to invigorate ties with the Kremlin.
In this regard, the United States are compelled to quietly watch the Russian maneuvers in the CIS countries. As Saakashvili recalled Obama's predecessor, George Bush, contrary, supported the "color revolutions" without fearing confrontation with Moscow.
Georgian President is sure that Russian aim now is to make the break in relations between Washington and Tbilisi and restore the sphere of influence in the region. Saakashvili said that Russia demands the US not to seek to push the former Soviet republics to join NATO, not openly support any opposition movements that seek to oust pro-Russian governments.
And moreover Moscow wants the US to consult Moscow before going ahead with any big initiatives in the former Soviet Union territories, especially military ones. According to Saakashvili, the most obvious change in the approach observed in NATO.
Yesterday the US and NATO said they welcome the policy of Yanukovich. Previously, the president of Ukraine abolished the commission, which worked on the country's accession to the Alliance. On Wednesday it became known of an agreement between Russia and Ukraine concerning an extension of term of the Black Sea Fleet in Crimea. The experts immediately pointed out that long-term military presence of Russia in Sevastopol would put off the prospect of Ukraine joining NATO for a long time.
Saakashvili said in an interview that the Obama team insists it has not turned away from Georgia and Tbilisi can not yet to complain about the lack of attention from Washington. However, the Georgian leader said the Russian-Georgian war in 2008 showed that Russia willing to use force to defend its interests in the region, while the United States could be dragged into a war if it continued to oppose those interests to the end.
Earlier in the article for The Christian Science Monitor Mikhail Saakashvili said that Georgia had to build democracy virtually "at gunpoint" - in the face of occupation and chronic threats from Russia. Today "Russian tanks stand just 30 miles from our capital".
"The Kremlin has long taken the view that our democratically elected government must be changed by whatever means", - Saakashvili wrote. "We understand that the best - if not only - guarantee of our security is a democratic Georgian state that has built lasting partnerships with Western institutions", he noted.
"Unfortunately, our peaceful development is being continuously hindered, primarily by Russia, which wants to resume its influence on the post-Soviet space," Saakashvili said then, speaking at Harvard University in the United States.
Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center
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| Saakashvili accuses Russia of nuclear smuggling |
| President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili accused Russia "of creating unstableness".
According to RBK, in the opinion of the Georgian leader, the unstableness enables the smugglers to deliver the highly enriched uranium to the Caucasus.
In his interview to the Associated Press agency, the president confirmed the information about the recently intercepted consignment of the highly enriched uranium. He did not specify the possible source of the trafficking, having mentioned that it "mostly comes from Russia".
The president just stated that Abkhazia and South Ossetia that proclaimed their independence have become the "black holes" in the field of the regional safety. The Georgian leader underlined that Russia should be responsible for maintaining control of the nuclear weapon distribution in these territories so long as "it has occupied them". In his opinion, the incidents with the highly enriched uranium threaten Georgia's safety.
Afterwards, Saakashvili underlined that Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin left no hope to restore the Soviet Union in any form. In this aspect, Moscow keeps "constantly playing its geopolitical games" around Georgia, the Georgian leader assured.
On April 14, Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia disseminated the information about the detention of a foreign group by the local security officials this March. The foreign citizens were found to have a small amount of highly enriched uranium on them. The Georgian party has already reported the incident to the International Nuclear Power Agency. The confiscated radioactive substances are kept in a safe place.
Source: Agencies
Kavkaz Center
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| Two explosions rock Dagestan Province's capital, two wounded |
| Two people were wounded in two explosions in downtown Shamilkala, the capital of the Caucasus Emirate's Province of Dagestan, on Tuesday evening, puppet police said.
"Two people were injured as a result of the first explosion. One of them is the son of Federal Security Service [FSB] Colonel Kamil Etimbekov, who was eliminated in 2004 in the yard of the same house," a police spokesman said.
According to media reports, FSB colonel Etimbekov investigated large-scale "terrorist attacks" before he was killed in June 2004.
The second man injured in Tuesday's explosion was also Etimbekov's relative. Both were hospitalized.
The second explosion occurred 50 meters (164 feet) from the first one. The explosive device had been placed in a garbage can. No one was injured.
Kavkaz Center
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| Two puppet policemen eliminated in Dagestan's capital Shamilkala |
| Mujahideen opened fire at a detail of the puppet police patrol service in Shamilkala (former Makhachkala) on Tuesday killing two police officers. According to the press service of the interior ministry gang of Dagestan, "the incident occurred in the Kirovsky district of Shamilkala at 01:30 local time."
According to the press service, "unidentified people were riding in a Zhiguli car which the policemen tried to stop for checking documents. In return, the criminals opened fire at them killing one policeman on the spot, and another died in hospital from numerous bullet wounds."
Kavkaz Center
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| 5 puppets wounded in car bomb in Ingushetia |
| 5 puppet policemen were wounded Monday when a bomb blew up under the car of the deputy ringleader interior minister of Russian-occupied Caucasus Emirate's Province of Ingushetia, Russian news agencies reported.
The bomb went off when the car of Beslan Shadiyev was parked in the local interior ministry gang car park in Ingushetia's largest city Nazran.
The puppet's driver was among the wounded but Shadiyev appeared not to be in the car at the time, the reports cited puppet officials as saying.
Kavkaz Center
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| TERROR. Life of programmer Albert Saayev is in danger. He may be killed by Kadyrovites |
| The Moscow-based human rights group "Za volyu!" sent the following statement to the editorial staff of Kavkaz Center:
"On 25th of September 2009, the Lefortov district court of Moscow city has authorized arrest of Albert Tashaevich Saayev, born in 1982, the owner of Khasav-Yurt internet club, and general director of "BIT" Co Ltd.
He was charged with article 272 part 2 (illegal access to computer information), article 273 part 1 (creation, usage and spreading of harmful for computer programs). Saayev was kept in a pre-trial prison during the investigation and trial process.
On 1st of April 2010, the Kuzminsk court of Moscow has sentenced the hacker, who was arrested last year on a charge of cracking web-sites in Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia (web-sites belonging to the puppet regimes-KC), for 2 years of imprisonment in a strict-security camp and 35 thousand rubles fine.
It was stated in court that in 2009 Saayev "has conducted computer attacks on Internet resources belonging to North-Caucasian federal district for cash rewards." In particular, he obtained an access to Chechnya Today web-site and presented it to his clients whose identity was not discovered. The clients in their turn have placed texts with threats addressed to Kadyrov on the main page of the web-site.
On 14th of April 2010 (after the passing of sentence), Saayev was escorted by special air flight to Chechnya. The prosecutor's office claims that he was escorted there in order to conduct an investigation regarding another criminal case, cracking of a web-site on 26 June, 2009. However, according to the information the investigation actions have not started yet, and will not be conducted any soon.
The wife of Albert, Saayeva Shahri Zaynudinovna, was not informed about whereabouts of her husband and the reason of escorting him to Chechnya.
The family of Albert Saayev fears for his life and health, and concerned with the fact that prosecutors keep silence about the real reason of his transportation, taking into consideration that Kadyrov thru the press has personally threatened Saayev with physical reprisal".
In connection with the statement that Albert Saayev was escorted to Chechnya, the renowned journalist and human rights activist Pavel Lyuzakov writes:
"It is well known what Kadyrov's torture chambers are, not only on the territory of Chechnya, but in Russia, or even in the whole world. In Moscow one can be jailed for no special reason, beaten up, or sentenced for any charge, but over there a person simply vanishes. It has been written and told in media and international courts about tortures and executions without trial in Kadyrov's personal zindans (prisons, torture chambers, etc -KC). And all such cases without an exception were won in courts.
On the web-site which was allegedly attacked by Albert Saayev, ("Chechnya today"), there is already a spiteful commentary in which it meaningfully says that Ramzan Kadyrov was personally informed about the transportation of Albert Saayev to Grozny.
The question arose, why should Kadyrov be informed about transportation of an ordinary prisoner? Does he personally meet every single convict?
One who has ears will hear: if Kadyrov is "personally" concerned with the destiny of Albert Saayev - then the fellow needs to be saved. Urgently. Before it is too late".
Department of Letters
Kavkaz Center
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| Two puppet police terrorists killed in Chechnya |
| As reported by sources in Chechnya, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate attacked a puppet police vehicle near the village of Martan-Chu in Urus-Martan district of Chechnya province Friday night. Two Kadyrov's police terrorists from the village of Ghoi-Chu were killed. No other details are avilable.
Kavkaz Center
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| 5 puppet police terrorists killed in ambush in Chechnya |
| As reported by Kavkaz Center correspondents in Chechnya, on Friday, April 16, 2009, at about 5:30 a.m. local time, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate ambushed a large group of puppet police terrorists from a riot police gang in the area of village Roshni-Chu in Urus-Martan district of Chechnya Province as it tried to go deep into a forest area in order to attack the Mujahideen.
The Mujahideen let the advance group of the puppet police come nearer and opened fire. After a short dense battle the puppets fled.
A KC source reports the Mujahideen destroyed the advance group of the puppets. According to preliminary data, at least 3 to 5 members of the Kadyrov's gang have been killed and several other police terrorists wounded.
The Mujahideen suffered no losses.
Kavkaz Center
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| 4 Russian invading terrorists killed in Chechnya |
| As reported by Russian occupation media outlets, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate killed at least 4 Russian invading terrorists in two IEA blasts that struck in Achkhoi-Martan district of Chechnya Thursday night, April 15, 2010. At least 3 Russians were killed in the 1st blast. When other Russians arrived to remove the corpses of their dead soldiers, the second blast eliminated at least 1 more Russian invader.
Kavkaz Center
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| Bus with Russian invading terrorists destroyed in Dagestan |
| As reported by Russian occupation media outlets, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate blew up a bus full Russian invading terrorists from a frontier-guard detachment in the Dagestani town of Kaspiysk on Thursday, April 15, 2010. An IEA has been attached to the bottom of the vehicle. As usual, the Russians didn't report their fatalities and casualties. Kavkaz Center correspondents in Dagestan have not yet reported on this operation.
Kavkaz Center
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| Mujahideen attacked security post in Dagestan |
| As reported by Russian occupation media outlets, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate attacked with fire-arms a security post of puppet police terrorists in the Dagestani capital of Shamilkala Thursday night, April 15, 2010. Before leaving the site of the operation, the Mujahideen mined a vehicle. Russians claim one puppet police terrorist has been seriously wounded.
Russians always reduce fatalities and casualties of puppet terrorists in their reports.
Kavkaz Center
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| Kadyrov's puppets openly threaten relatives of Chechen Mujahideen |
| On April 7, 2010, news appeared on the screen of pro-Kremlin puppet regime's TV that the relatives of Chechen Mujahideen were openly threatened by puppet authorities.
In the report, a delegation which consisted main Russian minion Ramzan Kadyrov's puppet administrators, has thundered to the residents of Staropromyslovsky district whose children are Mujahideen for defending their homeland against occupation forces.
"We will treat you the same way as your children treat civil residents. Keep it in mind. We are sitting here now. If you think that after the talk you will leave and sit at home quietly, you are deeply wrong" said Muslim Khuchiyev, a puppet who is so-called "Jokhar major".
And Zelimkhan Istamulov, ringleader of puppet Kadyrov's bandits in Staropromyslovsky district of Jokhar added: "You live on my territory, your children, brothers, sisters who joined illegal armed bands. If you think that from this moment you will be able to live free, to walk around, it is not true."
While making these statements, Nurdi Nukhazhiyev, so-called human rights ombudsman of Ramzan Kadirov, was sitting near Muslim Khuchiyev and did not react on these words.
Earlier we have reported about such threats and the realization of them: taking relatives of the supposed Chechen mujahedeen as hostages and torturing, burning the houses belonging to their families in Chechnya.
Kavkaz Center + WaYNaKH Online
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| Mujahideen burnt Russian military storehouses in Ingushetia |
| As reported by Russian occupation media outlets, on Tuesday, April 13, 2010, Mujahideen of the Caucasus Emirate burnt Russian military storehouses in the Ingush city of Buro (Vladikavkaz), which belongs to the CE Province of Ingushetia. The storehouses were destroyed by fire on the surface of at least 800 square meters. No other details were reported by the Russians.
Kavkaz Center
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