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Obituary of Shamil Basayev Chechen rebel leader responsible for noto

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  • Obituary of Shamil Basayev Chechen rebel leader responsible for noto

    Obituary of Shamil Basayev Chechen rebel leader responsible for
    notorious acts of terrorism, including the school siege at Beslan

    The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
    July 11, 2006 Tuesday

    SHAMIL BASAYEV, who was killed yesterday aged 41, was a hero to his
    people in the Republic of Chechnya; elsewhere he was regarded as one
    of the world's most infamous terrorists.

    The Chechens are a brave mountain race not noted for their
    squeamishness; but there are those who would say that Basayev scaled
    new heights of barbarity.

    He achieved international notoriety in June 1995 when he led an attack
    on a hospital at the city of Budyonnovsk, in southern Russia.

    There was further revulsion in October 2003, when his Chechen militants
    took 800 people hostage at a Moscow theatre. Two days later Russian
    special forces stormed the building; 129 hostages died, along with
    41 terrorists.

    Basayev also took responsibility for the Beslan school siege of
    September 2004; on the third day of the siege shooting broke out
    between the terrorists and the Russian security forces, resulting in
    the deaths of 344 civilians, 186 of them children.

    The Russian government put a price on the rebel leader's head, offering
    a reward of 300 million roubles ($10 million) for information leading
    to his capture. Although Basayev did not participate in the atrocity
    at Beslan, he claimed to have organised it, boasting that the whole
    operation cost only 8,000 euros.

    In an an interview broadcast on American television last year he was
    happy to describe himself as "a bad guy, a bandit, a terrorist". His
    justification was that the Russians had "officially" killed 40,000
    Chechen children, and were therefore terrorists as well.

    Shamil Salmanovich Basayev was born on January 14 1965 at Vedeno, in
    south-east Chechnya. His family is said to have had a long history of
    involvement in Chechen resistance to Russian rule, and he was named
    after Imam Shamil, who led the mountain tribes' resistance against
    the Tsarist armies in the 19th century.

    His grandfather fought in the abortive attempt to create a breakaway
    North Caucasus Emirate after the Russian Revolution, and the Basayevs,
    along with much of the rest of the Chechen population, were deported
    to Kazakhstan. They were allowed to return in 1957.

    After leaving school Basayev served for two years as a fireman in the
    Soviet army. He then worked at a state farm in the Volgograd region
    of southern Russia before moving to Moscow, where he unsuccessfully
    applied to read Law at Moscow State University. Instead he enrolled at
    the Moscow Institute of Land-Construction before deciding to become
    a computer salesman. A colleague later claimed that Basayev was more
    interested in playing video games than in selling computers, and that
    he appeared preoccupied with the career of Che Guevara.

    Basayev is said to have taken to the streets of Moscow in support of
    Boris Yeltsin when Communist hardliners attempted to stage a coup in
    August 1991.

    Two months later, however, the Chechen nationalist leader, Dzhokhar
    Dudayev, unilaterally declared independence from Russia, and Yeltsin
    declared a state of emergency and sent troops to the border with
    Chechnya.

    In response, Basayev and two others hijacked an Aeroflot passenger
    plane bound for Ankara, threatening to blow it up unless the state of
    emergency was lifted. On this occasion the crisis was resolved without
    loss of life, and the hijackers were allowed to return to Chechnya.

    In 1992 Basayev was fighting with the separatists in Abkhazia, a
    breakaway region of Georgia. After the Georgian government's forces
    were defeated in October 1992, the ethnic Georgian population of the
    region was driven out; Basayev's unit is said to have killed thousands
    of Georgian civilians, and it became the core of his "Abkhaz Battalion"
    in the first Chechen war.

    Basayev is also said to have fought with Azerbaijani forces in their
    war against Armenian separatists in the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    and to have established links with al-Qa'eda in Afghanistan. He was
    later to subscribe to the fundamentalist Wahhabi sect of Islam.

    There have been claims that he became an important figure in the
    Chechen mafia, and was involved in drug-dealing. Certainly he appeared
    to have access to considerable sums of money: he came to own several
    large houses and was able to finance his own private militia.

    But he himself maintained that he was supported by private benefactors.

    In December 1994 the Russians invaded Chechnya in an attempt to
    depose Dudayev, who appointed Basayev one of his military commanders;
    by now his "Abkhaz Battalion" was 2,000-strong. After a gruelling
    three-month campaign, the Russians took Grozny, Chechnya's capital,
    and the Chechens were forced into the hills.

    The "Abkhaz Battalion" had lost all but about 200 of its men, and
    on June 3 1995 a Russian air raid on Basayev's home town killed 11
    members of his family, including his wife and two children.

    Less than a fortnight later Basayev led the attack on Budyonnovsk
    hospital, 90 miles north of the Chechen border. For several days 1,500
    people were held hostage inside the hospital, and more than 100 of
    them died when Russian special forces unsuccessfully attempted to
    storm the building.

    Basayev was demanding the withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya.

    While he failed to achieve this aim, he did succeed in negotiating
    a halt to the Russian advance and the prospect of peace talks before
    he and his fellow terrorists were allowed to escape back to Chechnya.

    In 1996 Basayev was appointed commander of the Chechen forces, and in
    August that year he led a successful operation to retake Grozny. The
    Russians were forced to the negotiating table, and Chechnya effectively
    achieved its independence. Basayev ran for the presidency of his
    country, coming second to Aslan Maskhadov with 23.5 per cent of the
    vote. In early 1998 Maskhadov appointed him prime minister; having
    served his six-month term, Basayev stepped down, having failed to
    make good his promise to crack down on crime and kidnapping.

    In August 1999 Basayev and the Saudi terrorist known as Khattab led a
    2,000-strong army of Islamic fundamentalists in an unsuccessful attempt
    to help Dagestani Wahhabists to take over neighbouring Dagestan and
    establish a new Chechen-Dagestan Islamic republic.

    Meanwhile, in September that year, a number of Russian apartment blocks
    were bombed, killing 293 people. Basayev denied that he was involved,
    as did President Maskhadov, but the Russians had lost patience and
    sent forces back into Chechnya.

    As the Chechen rebels withdrew from Grozny in January 2000 Basayev
    stepped on a landmine, and had to have a foot amputated. The operation
    was videotaped and later televised, viewers seeing the foot being
    removed under local anaesthetic while Basayev looked on impassively.

    On December 27 2002 Chechen suicide bombers destroyed the republic's
    pro-Russian government's headquarters in Grozny, killing about 80
    people. Basayev claimed responsibility, saying that he had personally
    detonated the bombs by remote control. He also claimed responsibility
    for the bomb which killed the pro-Russian Chechen president Akhmad
    Kadyrov at a stadium in Grozny in May 2004, and for the deaths of
    10 people killed by a suicide bomber outside a Moscow metro station
    in August.

    He rejoined the Chechen separatist government in August 2005,
    taking the post of deputy prime minister. Less than a fortnight ago,
    Chechnya's new separatist leader, Doku Umarov, named Basayev as his
    vice-president.

    Basayev received the highest awards of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria
    (the separatists' name for the once-independent republic of Chechnya):
    "K'oman Siy" (honour of the nation) and "K'oman Turpal"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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