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Russians Helped Kill Kadyrov - Zakayev

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  • Russians Helped Kill Kadyrov - Zakayev

    MOSNEWS, Russia
    July 20 2004

    Russians Helped Kill Kadyrov - Zakayev
    Created: 20.07.2004 14:56 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 14:58 MSK, 2 hours 5
    minutes ago

    Yelena Rudneva, London

    Gazeta.Ru



    In an interview to Gazeta.Ru Akhmed Zakayev, a former envoy for
    Chechen separatist leader Aslan Maskhadov, shares his ideas as to who
    was behind the murder of the pro-Moscow president of Chechnya Akhmad
    Kadyrov and what the motives were.

    Zakayev also implicitly confirms earlier statements by Chechen
    warlord Shamil Basyaev, who spoke of a list of certain state-owned
    installations and compounds likely to be the target of terrorist
    attacks in near future. At the same time, according to Zakayev,
    Chechen rebels plan no more attacks on civilian installations.

    Do you communicate with Maskhadov often? Do you know where he is now?


    He is in Chechnya. We communicate about twice a month, when
    necessary. I just have to report on certain work that we have been
    doing here. If need be he has the capability to get in touch as well.
    If there were no Maskhadov, there would not be any Basayev, or anyone
    else.

    Do you mean they keep in touch? They were said to have serious
    disagreements.

    Of course, they do. They coordinate all the military operations which
    are being planned. As for the individual actions that take place
    every now and then, they are beyond any control absolutely. Such
    terrorist acts claim the lives of innocent people. I hope that people
    will no longer die at concerts, on trains, in the metro, in the
    cities.

    In the wake of the rebel raid on Ingushetia Shamil Basayev said he
    had a list of state-owned installations, which he plans to attack.
    The list includes the State Duma, the Federation Council, and other
    governmental buildings. Does such a list really exist?

    I think that for those waging war against a certain adversary such a
    list must exist. I am convinced that such a list must exist.

    How do you view the situation in present-day Chechnya, in the run-up
    to the new presidential elections?

    Judging by the recent developments in Chechnya and Ingushetia, it is
    evident that the true state of affairs is different from the official
    propaganda that the Kremlin is trying to convince the public of.
    There is a war going on there. You can call it a guerilla war, a
    separatist war. That makes no difference. For mothers who lose their
    sons, it makes no difference what that war is called. The result is
    the same: victims, ruins and no light at the end of the tunnel.

    >From 1994 up to now over a trillion dollars have been spent on the
    Chechen war. Can you imagine that? And there is no end to it. Ask an
    ordinary Russian citizen if he really needs that? It doesn't solve
    any of the problems. If we continue waging that war for another ten
    years, just as much money will be wasted.

    What was your opinion of Akhmad Kadyrov?

    Our roads never crossed, I cannot say anything personal. But when he
    took the pro-Russian stand, he became just another simple Russian
    Ivan Petrovich who arrived in Chechnya to kill, and for me he ceased
    to exist. I do not believe it is correct to speak of him as of a
    political figure. He was only implementing the policy imposed by the
    Kremlin. Incidentally, he himself admitted that he was at war all the
    time.

    Judging by the Kremlin's action Kadyrov was the central link in the
    system of checks and balances in Chechnya. Is that true? After all,
    it is hardly a coincidence that following Kadyrov's death many
    anticipated a new wave of hostilities as various groups clashed in
    the fight for power.

    I can assure you, there will be no fight for that post.

    Do you mean, because people rarely survive in that post?

    Yes, and also because regardless of who is assigned to it by the
    Kremlin, nothing will change absolutely. Kadyrov played no
    independent role. The election is just a screen for the West, for
    Europe. After all, you all know already who will be the next
    president.

    Did you know Alu Alkhanov personally. What can you say about him?

    Nothing, absolutely nothing other than that he headed a police
    station during the storming of Grozny in August 1996. It was the
    second or the third day when we surrounded the city; I was contacted
    on a walkie-talkie and told that Chechen policemen inside the train
    station would not talk to anyone but me. The talks were conducted by
    Adayev, the same man who is running together with Alkhanov today.

    Do you have any idea as to who could have killed Akhmad Kadyrov?

    I tend to believe that Kadyrov was not killed by Basayev, but by a
    unit of the Russian special services. Moreover, I am convinced of
    that. I know what the VIP guard service is like; I personally headed
    the guards between the two wars.

    In my time I also took part in the restoration of the Dinamo stadium
    [where Kadyrov was killed on 9 May this year] and I know that nothing
    can be planted there without the guards being informed. This is
    especially so, as Kadyrov had presidential guards assigned to him by
    Moscow. That is why it is impossible to imagine that some ordinary
    tractor driver or bricklayer could plant a bomb there. Although, of
    course, maybe it was not a joint operation but it was impossible to
    eliminate Kadyrov without the special services' involvement.

    Rumor has it that he was killed because he intended to hold talks
    with Maskhadov. Is that true?

    Maskhadov will never hold talks with people appointed by the Kremlin.
    To sow enmity between the Chechens is something all Russian leaders
    dream about.

    They tried to do that during Yeltsin's rule when he attended the
    talks between Zavgayev and Yandarbiyev. But we will never agree to
    that, since everything that is going on in Chechnya today is seen as
    a crime against humanity by the world community and European law.

    That is why even if Kadyrov did seek talks with Maskhadov, Maskhadov
    would never speak with Kadyrov. That would mean turning the war into
    a conflict between the Chechens and in doing so to write off all the
    victims. The war is between the Chechens and the Russian state, not
    between the Russians and the Chechens.

    You claim that the election organized by the federal authorities in
    Chechnya cannot be honest by definition. Who should conduct them
    then?

    There is a war going on there. But if we stop that war, only then
    will it be possible to hold democratic elections and only then will
    it be possible to discuss the presence of peacekeepers, or somebody
    else there.

    Elections must be held under the protectorate of the world community.
    That may be the OSCE, the UN, the European Union. Any international
    power institution, tasked to hold elections in such circumstances.
    They are not to be organized by the Kremlin, Maskhadov, or Zakayev.
    There is nothing like in Nagorny Karabakh, or in Ossetia. There they
    are trying to negotiate. For some reason Chechnya is an exception.
    Although I do understand Putin, it is his war, as it was the
    beginning of his political career.

    You've been living in London for quite a while. What is you status
    here?

    I have a passport with which I am free to travel across the globe,
    except Russia.

    Do you ask for security guarantees when you go somewhere outside
    London?

    As long as we are at war no one can feel safe. If I did ask for such
    guarantees nobody would agreed to grant them to me. Which country
    needs that? Besides, today Europe and the West are on the whole
    satisfied with what is going on in Russia. Russia is too preoccupied
    with the war in Chechnya to claim its role in the ongoing
    redistribution of spheres of power and influence.
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