Their story would be an everyday tale in Chechnya, where Russian troops
continue to commit daily atrocities, adding to the 3,000 Chechens believed
to be missing or murdered in the past three years. But it is from Galashki,
a quiet village in a closed region 25 miles from the Chechen border in
Ingushetia, a tiny and purportedly peaceful republic in the Russian
Federation.
For the first time Ingush citizens and refugees from Chechnya are being
attacked by Russian special forces hunting Chechen separatists. The Chechens
and the Ingush are ethnically and religiously close, they understand one
another's language, but until recently the Ingush have not been embroiled in
the Chechen conflict.
Forty miles of deep forest, in which the Chechen rebels are said to move
freely, separate Galashki from the Chechen border. And now Russian troops
have begun to unleash on the Ingushetia's civilian population the murder and
abductions that have terrorised Chechnya .
Today Tony Blair will meet President Vladimir Putin during his state
visit to Britain, and the prime minister is expected to reiterate his
general approval of Moscow's action in Chechnya.
In St Petersburg last month he said Russia's decision to impose a
referendum in March, under martial law, on whether there should be a
presidential elections there in October was "absolutely the right thing to
do".
Human rights groups and opposition MPs have put pressure on him to
confront Mr Putin with his forces' repeated abuses, but many suspect he will
gloss over the issue, if he mentions it at all, during their 30-minute
private meeting.
He will thus enforce what Amnesty International calls a western
"conspiracy of silence" about the brutality in Chechnya.
In recent months the rebels are reported to have made more use of
Ingushetia as a shelter from the Russian attacks in Chechnya. And
rebel-backed martyrdom bombings have spread; a bus bomb killed 17 people last
month in Mozdok, southern Russia.
Together these trends have prompted Moscow to see Ingushetia as a
potential haven for terrorists and to let its troops loose on its citizens
and refugees.
The Zabiyev family can testify to this. When they returned to the scene
of the shooting two days later, on June 12, they found Umar's body, riddled
with bullet wounds and with his lower jaw and nose smashed in, half-buried
in a hastily dug grave.
Isa said an empty bottle of mineral water, a packet of Russian cigarettes
and a tin of pork were found near the scene. "[Islamic] rebels do not have
these sort of things," he said. "It had to be Russian soldiers".
Taste for blood
Their inquiries to the local authorities have been fruitless, they say,
even though one of the five brothers is a local police chief. A group of
Russian troops was reported to be in the area at the time of the murder.
It is not the first time Galashki has been visited by Russian spetznaz
(special forces). Early this month two soldiers shot a 16-year-old as he
walked home, seriously injuring him. One picked up his spent shell and
walked away, villagers say. "These soldiers get a taste for blood, and then
it makes no difference if they kill a rebel, a schoolchild, or a dog," one
said.
Last year 22 people were arrested in anti-terrorist operations in
Ingushetia. In 22 days this month 11 people were arrested, nine abducted,
and one killed. There continue to be many arrests, according to the human
rights group Memorial.
Mikhail Ulibayev, 32, father of four and the only survivor of three
brothers from Grozny, was dragged from his home in the Aliev refugee camp on
Sunday by masked men, beaten in front of his daughters, and driven away in
their jeep.
Kharon Yasayev, 19, who had just finished his school exams, was dragged
away from his classmates at Tanzila refugee camp and beaten. Neither has
been heard of since.
At the Memorial office in Ingushetia Usam Baysaev said:
"I fear that this
is the start of an organised process, a psychological war against refugees."
The Kremlin had long tried to persuade the 68,000 Chechen refugees in
Ingushetia to return home, he said. "They want the same terrors as happen in
Chechnya to happen here so the refugees are more likely to return home."
The Kremlin was clearly in control of the abductions and murders, he
said. "Before the referendum President Putin said the clean-up operations
would stop. And 10 days before the referendum until two weeks after it they
lessened considerably. So clearly the Kremlin has some control over what
happens here. The question is, do they want to stop it?"