Fighting Continues in Ingushetia and Chechnya after Authorities Launch Joint Operation
Publication: North Caucasus Weekly
May 22, 2009 01:40 PM
Category: North Caucasus Weekly, The Caucasus, North Caucasus

Ingush President Yunus-Bek Yevkurov and Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov
Kavkazky
Uzel on May 21 quoted law enforcement officials as saying that a winter
base for Chechen rebels had been destroyed between the settlements of
Neftyanoe and Eshilkhatoi in the mountains of Chechnya’s southeastern
Vedeno district, while another large rebel base was discovered on the
outskirts of the village of Chemulga in Ingushetia’s Sunzha district.
On
May 17, the presidents of Chechnya and Ingushetia, Ramzan Kadyrov and
Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, announced they were jointly launching an operation
aimed to neutralize rebels in their respective republics. The
announcement followed a suicide bombing targeting the building of the
Chechen Interior Ministry in Chechnya’s capital Grozny that killed two
policemen and seriously wounded three others. Law enforcement officials
subsequently identified the suicide bomber as Beslan Chagiev, a
41-year-old resident of Ingushetia’s Sunzha district who, they claimed,
was a member of the inner circle of Chechen rebel leader Dokka Umarov.
Following the attack, Kadyrov said he would no longer offer amnesty to
rebels and vowed either to imprison or kill all of them (see the
articles by Mairbek Vatchagaev and Valery Dzutsev in this issue).
Kavkazky
Uzel on May 21 quoted Chechen law enforcement sources as saying that
one suspected rebel had been killed and a former rebel and seven
suspected rebel accomplices had been taken into custody over the
previous two days. Itar-Tass quoted police officials as saying that
they had surrounded a group of up to 30 militants in a forest on the
border between the Russian republics of Chechnya and Ingushetia. They
said the blockaded militants were part of a group that had been trying
to abduct local residents and steal their vehicles. A shootout between
security forces and a small group of gunmen reportedly took place
around the village of Chemulga in Ingushetia on the morning of May 21,
during which several gunmen were wounded.
Interfax quoted a
military source as saying "mercenaries" may be among the militants
blockaded along the Chechen-Ingush administrative border. The source
said the blockaded militants belong to a group operating under the
command of Umarov, and that a total of four militants have been killed
since the start of the joint Chechen-Ingush security operation,
including a "mercenary" from Azerbaijan. Meanwhile, a policeman
involved in the operation was injured by a landmine while searching for
militants in a forest.
On May 20, a Federal Security Service
(FSB) officer was killed in Ingushetia when a bomb destroyed his car.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) quoted an FSB spokesman, Damir Rosin, as
saying that Magomed Tokhov, deputy head of legal affairs for the FSB in
Ingushetia, died on the spot after his car exploded in Nazran. “It was
a makeshift explosive device which was attached to the bottom” of the
Lada car, Rosin told AFP. He said Tokhov was the fifth FSB officer
killed in Ingushetia this year.
Law enforcement authorities in
Chechnya said on May 19 that an alleged militant was killed and four
policemen wounded in two incidents in the republic. According to The
Associated Press, Chechnya’s Interior Ministry said police shot and
killed the alleged militant after he opened fire when they tried to
arrest him southwest of Grozny early on May 19. The ministry said three
federal police troops and one Chechen police officer were seriously
wounded by gunmen who attacked their position in southeastern Chechnya
twice late on May 18. The attackers escaped, AP reported.
Chechnya’s
Interior Ministry reported that a policeman was killed by a
remote-controlled explosive device near the southern village of Bamut
on May 17, while another Chechen policeman died from wounds sustained
during a battle with militants in Ingushetia. On May 18, an Ingush
policeman and a local resident were wounded in a clash with militants
in Ingushetia’s Sunzha district. Two militants were killed in the
shootout, law enforcement sources reported.
During a visit to
the State Duma in Moscow on May 19, Kadyrov repeated his vow that he
will no longer ask for amnesties for rebel fighters. “We will no longer
request an amnesty [for the militants] from the federal center, but
will tackle them brutally,” RIA Novosti quoted Kadyrov as saying.
“Today the republic is reviving. If someone hasn’t seen or heard this,
then they are not a person and his place is in prison or in a cemetery.”
Kadyrov
also declared that “churches and culture” are being revived in Chechnya
and insisted the republic had made its final choice to remain part of
Russia. “The Chechens are Russian patriots,” Itar-Tass quoted him as
saying. “We wish to be worthy citizens of this country.”
Kadyrov’s
vow to liquidate rebel fighters has received backing from Chechnya’s
official clergy. “I am exercising my right to issue a fatwa supporting
the actions of Ramzan Kadyrov aimed at liquidating the criminal
groups,” the Grozny-Inform news agency on May 20 quoted the republic’s
mufti, Sultan Mirzaev, as saying. “If we continue to stand on ceremony
with criminals as with little children, we will never get rid of this
evil.” Interfax quoted as Mirzaev saying that Kadyrov had repeatedly
“offered the militants [the] chance to put down their weapons and
return to peaceful life” but that in the wake of the recent attacks by
Chechen rebels, “that opportunity will no longer be offered.”
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