Russia Killed 1123 Chechen
Civilians in 2002: Report
BONN, April 19 - The Russian military abuses in Chechnya leave more
than 100 civilians killed, executed, abducted or tortured every month,
according to an official Russian report carried by a German newspaper on
Friday, April 19.
The report, a copy of which handed to Russian President Vladimir Putin
during a January meeting of the National Security Council, carries the
first official admission by Moscow of criminal acts perpetrated by its
forces in the Muslim republic, Frankfurter Rundschau reported.
It lists names of 1,123 Chechen civilians killed by the Russian units in
2002, nearly 95 ones a month.
According to the official Russian report, a large number of other Chechen
civilians are still missing while many corpses were found littered down
the roads.
Russian officials have denied the existence of the leaked document, saying
some circles in Europe were using it as an excuse to try to set up a war
crimes tribunal for the region.
Noticeably, the information mentioned in the report was approved by the
Russian-backed Chechen administration which itself issued another report
worded by its officials.
Seventy civilians were executed, 145 abducted, 25 bodies found with clear
signs of severe torture this year, read the second report.
It cited, an example of these crimes, an attack by four U.S.-made armored
vehicles which drove into a house of Aischat Meschijewa in Grozny at a
January dawn.
The Russian forces abducted Meschijewa, her husband and two sons after
being severely beaten by the buts of their machine-guns.
The German newspaper quoted Russian Emergency Ministry officials as saying
that they discovered new 49 mass graves in Chechnya with 2,879 bodies
buried inside.
The New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) denounced in its latest report
the Russian government for such acts.
But Abdul-Khakim Sultygov, Putin's envoy for human rights in Chechnya,
denied the existence of such government reports and denounced HRW.
"Rather than a human rights organization, it is an extremist organization
spreading totalitarian notions about Europe's democratic values," Interfax
quoted him as saying.
"Legally Established"
In the meanwhile, the Russian opposition daily Nezavisimaya Gazeta
presented another report on Wednesday, April 16, supposedly compiled by
Chechen Prosecutor General Vladimir Kravchenko and presented to a secret
meeting of Chechen security forces in early March.
"The fact that dozens, if not hundreds, of Russian soldiers and police
officers systematically break the law in Chechnya has been legally
established," the report says, according to Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
The report says that prosecutors had opened 1,178 investigations into the
disappearance of 1,663 civilians in Chechnya since Russian forces pushed
into the republic in October 1999.
In 2002, prosecutors opened 565 investigations into repeated cases of
abduction, the report says.
"Out of this total, 300 include evidence implicating representatives of
Russian federal forces," the report said.
There are clear evidence that Russian intelligence bodies FSB and GRU are
involved in these military crimes through special assassination units they
had formed for carrying them out, according to the Russian human rights
group Memorial.
"The Russian leaders are even proud of these crimes, as the commander of
the GRU assassination unit said in press reports that the best way to
secure victory in this war is kill the Chechen 'dogs' in the dark," said
chief of the group Alexander Tscherkassow.
He said that the current Russian "terrorism" does not as much differ from
crimes committed, upon orders from Stalin, against the Caucasus Republic
in 1937-1938.
The Grozny administration's commission of missing said that 2800 Chechens
disappeared since the first Chechen War, 46 in every 10,000 inhabitants,
while the number stood at 44 in every 10,000 at the Russian dictator's
era, he added.
International human rights groups expressed disappointment with the
failure of the United Nations Human Rights Commission (UNHRC), meeting in
Geneva Thursday, April 17, to approve strong condemnations of the Russian
government for ongoing rights abuses in Chechnya.
A resolution introduced by European Union (EU) countries that urged Russia
to address serious abuses, including summary executions, torture, and
disappearances in Chechnya was rejected in a 15-21 vote.
Amnesty International said it was "profoundly disappointed" by that
result, charging that serious abuses take place "on a daily basis in
Chechnya."
The UNHRC's lack of action on this situation is a "blatant disregard of
the suffering of the victims of such abuses and their relatives, and the
risks to which civilians continue to be exposed," Amnesty stressed. The
U.S. decided against co-sponsoring the resolution.
"Tribunal"
Joining the wave of condemnation, the Council of Europe, a pan-continental
human rights body, called for the creation of an international tribunal to
try war crimes committed in Chechnya.
Such a tribunal should be set up to try war crimes and crimes against
humanity committed in Chechnya "if the current climate of impunity
continues to prevail," the Council's Parliamentary Assembly said
Wednesday. |