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Newspapers - Government


Russia uses death squads and torture in Chechnya, says Amnesty.

By Andrew Osborn in Moscow.

The Independent, UK - 24 June, 2004.

RUSSIAN FORCES in Chech­nya were yesterday accused of operating South American-style death squads which routinely target innocent civilians.

With the backing of local militia, Russian troops were also accused of running unoffi­ cial torture centres known as “filtration camps” and of rou­tinely committing war crimes and human rights abuses “with total impunity.”

The allegations, in a har­rowing report from Amnesty In­ternational, included claims that Russia ’s occupying forces indulge in the systematic rape, torture and kidnapping of innocent civilians. Very few of the perpetrators have been brought to justice, the report said.

Amnesty claimed its findings contradicted the Russian gov­ernment’s claim that the situation in the strife-torn republic was “normalizing” and ac­cused Russia of failing miser­ably to live up to its human rights obligations. “In spite of claims to the contrary by Rus­sian and pro-Moscow Chechen officials, the situation in the Chechen republic is far from normal.”

The report also accused the international community - and the United Nations in particular - of being soft on Moscow and of producing only “muted” criticism of abuses in Chechnya since the terrorist attacks on New York in 2001.

Giving credence to claims that the Chechen conflict is spilling over into other parts of southern Russia , Amnesty said that similar abuses were start­ing to be perpetrated by Rus­sian forces in neighbouring Ingushetia. Amnesty noted that at least 34 people had simply disappeared in In­gushetia between September of last year and March of this year and drew attention to an inci­dent in which a Russian heli­copter gunship had fired its rockets at a civilian car killing two of its occupants.

While the report also criti­cised Chechen separatist rebels for human rights abuses and for the targeting of policemen and government officials, the ma­jority of its findings focused on Russian troops and the Moscow-backed local militia run by Ramzan Kadyrov, son of the republic’s murdered presi­dent. “Russian federal and se­curity forces continue to carry out human rights violations such as extra judicial execu­tions, ‘disappearances’, arbi­trary detentions, ill-treatment and torture, including rape, with impunity,” the report said. “Women have increasingly been targeted - a number of women described to Amnesty International’s representatives how they were tortured, in­cluding with electric shocks, and raped in detention.”

The report quoted the author and human rights activist, Sergei Kovalev, who used the phrase “death squads” to de­scribe perpetrators of such abuses. It highlighted the discovery in April of nine gunshot­-riddled bodies of local men in a ravine after they had been de­tained by federal forces and of the bruised lifeless corpse of Aslan Davletuakaev, a human rights activist, in January. Peo­ple who dared complain about their treatment to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg had come in for particular intimidation and vi­olence, the report alleged.

Amnesty also claimed to have received “credible and consistent reports” of secret unofficial detention centres known as filtration camps, one of which is in Grozny , the Chechen capital.

There was an account from a man called Akhmed Gisaev of having been held in such a facility where the walls were spattered with dried blood. He claims he was “kicked, beaten with ba­tons and fists, burnt with cigarettes and suffered electric shock torture on his right hand and foot.” He was, he said, also deprived of food and sleep and made to drink alcohol, forbidden for a practising Muslim.

An Amnesty representative, Mariana Katsarova, also al­leged yesterday that Imran Ezhiyev, head of the Russian­-Chechen Friendship Society, had been detained 17 times and suffered torture, including having his teeth filed.

But Taus Dzhabrailov, chair­man of the Moscow-backed Chechen State Council, was dismissive of Amnesty's report. “Nobody in Chechnya hushes up abuses committed by ser­vicemen,” he told Interfax news agency. “All these facts are characteristic not only of Chechnya or Russia ... they also happen in any country.”

 

KEY POINTS & SOLUTIONS:

  1. Acts of aggression will always lead to acts of retaliation. (See related article below)

    The principle purpose of the International Representative Government (IRG) is to unite all countries, and to create a world of greater cooperation and teamwork. 'Individual' governments which only represent their own interests, inevitably end up in conflict with those that oppose them. This results in violence and war. It's a never-ending cycle due to the 'psychology of individuality'. Such acts will continue until all countries are prepared to work together in cooperation with each other, for the good of all.

 

RELATED ARTICLES:

Chechen 'Black Widow' bombed Russian jet to avenge brother's death

 

 

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