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Shamil Basayev: A ruthless Chechen warlord who mocked the Kremlin

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  • Shamil Basayev: A ruthless Chechen warlord who mocked the Kremlin

    Shamil Basayev: A ruthless Chechen warlord who mocked the Kremlin

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 11, 2006 Tuesday 4:14 PM GMT

    MOSCOW, July 11 2006 -- Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev, who was
    reported killed on Monday, masterminded horrific attacks across
    Russia and openly mocked the Kremlin by remaining at large for more
    than a decade.

    Among dozens of other attacks against civilian and military targets,
    Basayev, 41, claimed responsibility for the Beslan school hostage
    siege in September 2004 in which 362 people were killed, including
    186 children.

    The bearded guerrilla leader was at the core of the fierce independence
    fight in Chechnya in which as many as 100,000 civilians -- about 10
    percent of the population -- are feared to have been killed since
    December 1994.

    Basayev claimed that the devastation wreaked by Russia's military
    campaigns on the Chechen people, including the death of many of his
    own relatives, justified attacks on Russian civilians.

    But he was also widely regarded as an exceptional and fearless military
    commander whose rag-tag forces inflicted major defeats on the Russian
    army in Grozny and the Caucasus mountains.

    He became legendary for his ability to escape capture, despite multiple
    wounds, including the loss of his right lower leg on a landmine five
    years ago, and a 10 million dollar bounty on his head.

    But he lost support among ordinary Chechens when he embraced radical
    Islam in the late 1990s. Many blamed him for provoking a second
    conflict in 1999 after having masterminded the defeat of Russian
    troops in a first 1994-1996 war in Chechnya.

    As figurehead of the rebels' extremist wing, Basayev increasingly
    abandoned his nationalist credentials for a radical Islamist agenda,
    becoming the link between Chechnya and the worldwide Islamic jihad
    movement.

    Born in 1965, Basayev was raised in Dyshne-Vedeno, a Chechen village
    at the heart of territory with a tradition of rebellion against
    Moscow. He claimed his ancestors fought alongside Imam Shamil, the
    legendary 19th century resistance warrior.

    He studied in Moscow and began dealing in imported computers in the
    last days of the Soviet Union. Then in August 1991 he joined a group
    of Chechens supporting President Boris Yeltsin at the Moscow White
    House to resist a communist coup.

    In November 1991, Basayev and two others hijacked a Russian plane
    from Mineralniye Vody in southern Russia and flew to Turkey to promote
    Chechnya's independence struggle. They were later released by Turkish
    authorities.

    During the 1990s, Basayev fought against Armenian troops in
    Nagorno-Karabakh and against Georgian forces in the breakaway province
    of Abkhazia.

    In Abkhazia he was widely rumoured to have been supported by Russia's
    military intelligence forces, the GRU, as part of Moscow's support
    for the separatist Abkhaz against the Georgians.

    He is also believed to have taken men for training in Afghanistan.

    In the first Chechen war Basayev emerged as the most effective field
    commander.

    At the height of the conflict in 1995 Basayev and a small group of
    men took hostage hundreds of people in a hospital in the southwest
    Russian town of Budyonnovsk.

    The ruthless and utterly unexpected raid forced the Russian government
    into suspending military operations in Chechnya and beginning peace
    negotiations.

    When these broke down, Basayev was the principal commander in the rebel
    recapture of Grozny in August 1996 -- one of the biggest humiliations
    the modern Russian military has faced.

    In 1999, he provided the Russian government with an excuse to
    re-occupy Chechnya by leading a failed foray into Dagestan, a province
    neighbouring Chechnya, to try and provoke an Islamist uprising.

    Moscow was repeatedly shamed by Basayev's ability to move freely
    around the Caucasus mountains region for more than a decade.

    A network of corrupt Russian officials was reported to have helped
    him to swap the caves and forests of the mountains for comfortable
    safehouses in Chechnya and far beyond.

    "He doesn't have to run around the mountains," Taus Dzhabrailov,
    a top official in the Kremlin-installed Chechen government, told AFP
    earlier. "He is driven around comfortably in jeeps. He just pays."

    In 2005, Russian journalist Andrei Babitsky filmed an interview with
    Basayev aired on US television network ABC in which the warlord issued
    threats of new Beslan-style attacks should Russia fail to stop what
    he called "genocide" in Chechnya.

    Basayev, who lost 11 relatives in a Russian air attack on Vedeno in
    1995, mocked his pursuers, saying: "Don't tell me they're trying to
    find me. I'm trying to find them."

    sms-dt/gk
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