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  • Chechen leader threatens to kill Russians abroad

    The Times (London)
    April 1, 2004, Thursday

    Chechen leader threatens to kill Russians abroad

    by Jeremy Page in Moscow


    Shamil Basayev, the Chechen rebel leader, has threatened to attack
    Russians overseas and to use chemical weapons to avenge the killing
    of a former Chechen president in Qatar.

    In a message of defiance Mr Basayev, one of Russia's most-wanted
    terrorists, said: "We have the ability to kill Russians in virtually
    every country, but we have not moved our operations outside Russia's
    borders yet. Today it is the event in Qatar that will determine for
    us our future actions. What Russians can do, we can, too."

    Mr Basayev has claimed responsibility for a string of attacks,
    including the Dubrovka theatre siege in 2002, which left 129 hostages
    dead, and the suicide bombing on the Moscow Metro in February that
    killed 40 people.

    His threat, published on the Chechen rebel website kavkazcenter.com,
    will alarm hundreds of thousands of Russians living overseas and
    raise fears that Chechen rebels possess, or are seeking, chemical
    weapons.

    It also raises questions about the effectiveness of President Putin's
    hardline stance on Chechnya, which has helped him to win two
    elections but which critics say is fuelling attacks on Russian
    civilians.

    "The Russian leadership constantly reiterates that it is not fighting
    Chechen separatists but international terrorists, and this has
    finally become a self-fulfilling prophecy," Andrei Piontkovsky, the
    independent political analyst, wrote in an editorial. "Thanks to the
    methods with which we have waged this war, we have turned practically
    the whole population of Chechnya into enemies."

    Mr Basayev's statement echoed a pledge from Khaled Mashaal, the new
    Hamas leader, that Israel would suffer an "earthquake" of revenge for
    assassinating his predecessor Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.

    Mr Basayev said: "We will, bomb, blow up, poison, stage gas
    explosions and fires whenever possible on everything else on the
    territory of Russia."

    His martyrs' brigade would not use biological or nuclear materials
    and would not target mosques, synagogues, nursery schools, orphanages
    or psychiatric institutions, he said. But he added: "Combat chemical
    agents, toxins and different poisons are being used against us.
    Therefore we reserve the right to use chemical and toxic substances
    and the same poisons against Russia."

    He offered to suspend attacks against civilians if Russian forces in
    Chechnya stopped abusing local people. Human rights groups accuse
    Russian and pro Moscow Chechen forces of illegally detaining,
    torturing and killing hundreds of people there.

    There was no official reaction from the Kremlin, but a Kremlin
    official told The Times that the threat was not new. "We've heard
    this many times," he said. "They may take some action. They need an
    escalation because the conflict is dying down.

    But there would be a strong reaction against the Chechen diaspora in
    the country where it took place."

    Mr Putin has repeatedly ruled out negotiating with rebel leaders and
    vowed to exterminate them. He is keen to show that a peace plan
    launched last year has brought peace and stability to the region
    after a decade of conflict. However, Russian forces and the new
    pro-Moscow Chechen administration have failed to find Mr Basayev and
    fighting continues.

    Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, the former Chechen President, was killed in
    February when an explosion blew apart his vehicle as he was being
    driven away from a mosque in Doha, the Qatari capital.

    Mr Basayev has blamed the killing on Russian security services.
    Russian viewed Yandarbiyev as a fundraiser and recruiter for Chechen
    rebels and had been seeking his extradition from Qatar.

    Qatar has detained two Russian agents and evicted a Russian diplomat
    whom it suspects of involvement in the assassination.

    Sources have told The Times that the two agents have confessed to
    killing Yandarbiyev for Russian Intelligence and of bringing
    explosives to Qatar in the diplomatic bag. Moscow insists that they
    are innocent and should be freed.

    CONFLICT IN THE CAUCASUS

    * War in Chechnya began in the early 19th century, when Russian
    armies entered the Caucasus, an area previously under Ottoman rule.
    Unlike the predominantly Christian populations of Georgia and
    Armenia, who saw Russian rule as a protection from Turkish
    persecution, the Chechens viewed Orthodox Russia as a threat. The
    Chechens never accepted the Russians, leading to a 40-year guerrilla
    war

    * The leader of the Chechen resistance was Imam Shamil, who was
    captured in 1859. Half a million Russian troops were eventually
    deployed to the conflict

    * The Chechen Autonomous Region was created in 1922, becoming part of
    the Chechen-Ingush republic in 1936

    * Stalin accused the Chechens of collaboration and ordered their mass
    deportation in 1944

    * As the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, the Chechen-dominated
    parliament declared the region's independence. Russian troops entered
    Chechnya in the winter of 1994 to crush the independence movement and
    up to 100,000 people died in the next 20 months

    * Russian troops withdrew in 1996, leaving the republic in effect
    independent but lawless. Troops returned three years later -on the
    orders of President Putin - after a series of attacks by Chechen
    rebels in Russia
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