Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia Says Chechen Rebel Leader Slain After Associate Tips Off Poli

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia Says Chechen Rebel Leader Slain After Associate Tips Off Poli

    RUSSIA SAYS CHECHEN REBEL LEADER SLAIN AFTER ASSOCIATE TIPS OFF POLICE
    Kazbek Vakhayev

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 18, 2006

    Police killed the Chechen rebel leader acting on a tip from within
    his network, a possible blow to efforts to spread the increasingly
    Islam-inspired insurgency throughout southern Russia.

    Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev was shot Saturday during a raid on a hideout
    in his Chechen hometown of Argun, nine miles east of Grozny. He had
    been planning a terror attack in Argun to coincide with the Group of
    Eight summit of leading industrialized nations in St. Petersburg in
    mid-July, the Moscow-backed Chechen premier said.

    Wearing combat fatigues, Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov posed for TV
    cameras next to a half-naked bloodied body identified as the rebel
    leader's. He said a close associate of Sadulayev's tipped police to
    his whereabouts for the equivalent of US$55 (A43).

    "He urgently needed to buy a dose of heroin, so he sold his leader
    for heroin," Kadyrov, flanked by his lieutenants, said with a grin.

    The prime minister said his paramilitary police had wanted to capture
    Sadulayev but had to kill him when he resisted arrest. Russian
    television stations showed the basement of a house where the rebel
    leader was allegedly hiding, its wall riddled with bullets.

    "The terrorists have been virtually beheaded. They have sustained a
    severe blow, and they are never going to recover from it," Kadyrov
    said. "We must decisively end international terrorism in the whole
    of the North Caucasus."

    The mountainous Caucasus region encompasses southern Russia _ including
    the breakaway Chechen republic _ and the former Soviet republics of
    Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.

    An intelligence agent and a police officer were killed in the
    operation, the Federal Security Service, the main KGB successor agency,
    said in a statement. One rebel also was killed and two rebels escaped,
    NTV news reported.

    Top rebel aide Ibrahim Mezhidov confirmed Sadulayev was killed,
    according to the Kavkaz Center Web site sympathetic to the rebels.

    Speaking to Ekho Moskvy radio, rebel envoy Akhmed Zakayev, who lives
    in London, denounced the killing as a "political murder." He said
    warlord Doku Umarov would now become secessionist president.

    An Islamic scholar, Sadulayev took over after Russian forces killed
    rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov in March 2005. Maskhadov had called
    Sadulayev a co-organizer of one of the most high-profile Chechen
    rebel attacks: a 2004 raid on police and security installations in
    the neighboring republic of Ingushetia that killed some 90 people.

    Russian prosecutors consider Sadulayev the top organizer of the 2001
    kidnapping of Kenneth Gluck, of New York, who worked for Doctors
    Without Borders in southern Russia. Gluck was freed after 25 days.

    Previously, Sadulayev had been an imam of his hometown mosque. He
    preached on local television when Chechnya enjoyed de-facto
    independence after the Russian troops' withdrawal following the
    botched 1994-96 Chechen campaign.

    Though rooted in nationalist sentiment, Chechnya's separatist movement
    took on a growing Islamic cast after Russian forces launched a second
    Chechen invasion in 1999. In 2002, Sadulayev was named the chief
    judge of the Chechen rebels' court of Islamic law.

    As rebel president, Sadulayev presided over insurgent efforts to
    reach beyond Chechen borders and encourage militant movements in
    nearby Caucasus regions.

    Militant cells linked to Chechen rebels have spread quickly across
    the volatile Caucasus provinces, encouraged by the region's poverty
    and simmering public anger at police brutality and persecution of
    Muslims who worship outside officially sanctioned mosques.

    "Sadulayev has cast himself as the leader of the so called 'Caucasus
    Front,' the man leading a new generation of young militants," Alexei
    Malashenko, and expert with the Carnegie Endowment's Moscow office,
    told The Associated Press.

    He also was a compromise figure, accepted by different militant cells
    throughout the Caucasus, and as a result his death deals a serious
    blow to the Chechen rebel movement, said Alexander Ignatenko, head
    of the Moscow-based Institute for Religion and Politics.

    "Heads of regional cells have sworn an oath of allegiance to him,"
    Ignatenko told AP. "They might not accept another Chechen as their
    leader."'

    Some analysts said that Sadulayev's death could set stage for a turf
    battle between warlords Umarov and Shamil Basayev.

    A top rebel commander, Basayev has claimed responsibility for some
    of Russia's worst terror attacks, including the seizure of some 800
    hostages in a Moscow theater in October 2002 and the September 2004
    school hostage taking in Beslan that killed 331.

    "Basayev is much more authoritative than Umarov," Malashenko said.

    The Chechen prime minister _ whose feared paramilitary forces are
    suspected of abducting civilians and other violence _ vowed Saturday
    to track down both warlords.

    Political commentator Yulia Latynina said the rebel leader's killing
    marked the beginning of Kadyrov's bid for regional presidency. "By
    liquidating a major rebel figure ... Kadyrov wanted to prove his
    loyalty to federal authorities," she said on Ekho Moskvy.

    Kadyrov is the son of Chechnya's first pro-Moscow president, Akhmad
    Kadyrov, who was assassinated in a rebel bombing in 2004. He has
    moved up steadily within the region's Kremlin-backed government and
    is expected to become Chechen president when he reaches the mandated
    age of 30 in October.
Working...
X