A Russian human rights group says Chechen security officers have kidnapped the head of a rights group in Moscow and flown him to Grozny, Chechnya's capital.
The Memorial group said Arbi Khachukayev, who heads Law, an organisation critical of Chechnya's Kremlin-backed leader, was detained on Thursday and bundled onto a flight.
Chechnya's interior minister said Khachukayev was detained
Human rights groups have been critical of
Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechnya's Kremlin-backed leader [EPA]
for alleged involvement in an armed assault, the RIA news agency reported.
The Law group has exposed alleged human rights abuses committed by forces loyal to Ramzan Kadyrov, the Chechen president.
Svetlana Gannushinka, a human rights worker, told Britain's Guardian newspaper it was "not clear whether he's [Khachukayev] a hostage or a defendant"
"As soon as I found out about his kidnapping I faxed the office of the interior ministry at Vnukovo airport. They didn't answer," she said.
Ongoing attacks
A string of Kadyrov's critics and political rivals have been murdered in recent years in Russia, Austria and Dubai.
In depth
The North Caucasus: A
history of violence
Chechnya's battle for
independence
Earlier this year, two human rights advocates were abducted in Chechnya and killed.
The bodies of Zarema Sadulayeva and Alik Dzhabrailov were found in Grozny, in August, a day after being abducted from their offices by masked men.
Their murders came a month after the death of Natalya Estemirova, one of the best known activists in Chechnya and head of the Memorial group, who was abducted in Chechnya and found in neighbouring Ingushetia.
Ongoing attacks against human rights activists has led Memorial and other human rights organisations to suspend their operations in Chechnya.
Last month, a Moscow court ordered Oleg Orlov, head of Memorial, to retract his accusation that Kadyrov was responsible for Estemirova's death.