MOSCOW,
October 28 (IslamOnline & New Agencies) - Russia began a day of
mourning Monday, October 28, for the victims of last week's hostage
drama in a Moscow theater in which 117 people died, amidst mounting
criticism of Russia's "callous" use of a mystery gas which
experts believe may have been a chemical weapon developed during the
Cold War.
One
hundred and fifteen people died during the special forces operation to
rescue more than 800 people taken hostage by a group of Chechen
fighters, who seized a Moscow theater Wednesday, October 23, during a
performance of a hit musical.
One
woman died on the night of the hostage taking, and another man was
killed in the minutes immediately preceding the rescue operation.
However,
all the other 115 died from the effects of an incapacitating gas the
Russians pumped into the theater to stun the hostage-takers, and
medical officials have warned that the toll could rise considerably,
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
One
hundred and forty-five people are still in intensive care in hospitals
around the city, 45 of them in serious condition, suffering from the
after-effects of the gas, AFP added.
Russian
officials have refused to provide details of the gas, which experts
believe may have been a chemical weapon of a non-lethal nature
developed during the Cold War, the French news agency added.
A
Russian expert on Moscow Echo radio said that the dosage of the gas
used in the rescue operation had not taken into account the weakened
condition of most of the hostages, and the fact that many of them
would have been middle-aged, elderly or in uncertain health.
In
his brief address, Russian President Vladimir Putin set the hostage
taking and its bloody outcome firmly in the context of the campaign
against international terrorism, displaying no inclination to question
the current Russian policy on independence-seeking Chechnya.
Local
officials said the families of those who died will each receive the
equivalent of 3,200 dollars (euros) in compensation, and those who
survived will receive have half that amount.
However,
there was anger among the relatives and friends of the hostages at the
refusal by the authorities to grant them access to their loved ones
or, in many cases, even to let them know whether they were alive or
dead.
Many
were angered too by the lack of precise information about the gas from
which the patients were suffering, which doctors said was impeding
them in their work.
The
refusal to specify the nature of the gas used in the rescue operation
has been attributed to traditional Russian obsessions over secrecy,
but also to security concerns, with some expressing fears that a nerve
gas may have been employed in breach of international conventions.
For
some observers, the Russian government's handling of the crisis was
callous, and the business daily, Kommersant, headlined,
referring to the security services: "The FSB experimented on the
hostages."
Russian
Federation Council (senate) speaker Sergei Mironov was due later to
hold a press conference, accompanied by toxicology and anesthesia
experts, to give further details on the gas.
An
AFP employee who was among those taken hostage said Sunday that none
of the bodies of the dead or injured bore bullet wounds.
"They
are not telling us anything about the nature of the gas," Oleg
Zyogonov said by telephone from his hospital, adding: "I saw no
bullet impact on the bodies."
He
said hospital staff had forbidden him to talk to anybody and were
monitoring his telephone conversation with the AFP office in Moscow.
Doctors
who entered the theater after the raid told local media that several
hostages had died choking on their own vomit.
Meanwhile,
the British press said Monday Russia should open an independent
inquiry into the climax of the Moscow hostage drama and end the Soviet
habit of secrecy to reveal what kind of gas was used, resulting in the
death of nearly all the 117 victims.
The
refusal of the Russian authorities to reveal what kind of gas was
used, although this knowledge could be used to help the injured, was
"a disgrace, a throwback to the worst of Soviet military secrecy
and a callous disregard for human life," wrote The Times.
The
left-wing Guardian also said that "there is only one way
to clear this up and that is to do something that Russia has
historically been ill-inclined to do: hold an independent public
inquiry."
It
went on: "If it turns out that hostages died who could have been
saved had the government told medical staff at the hospital what the
nature of the gas was, then the political consequences could be very
dire indeed for the president," Vladimir Putin.
"It
is as if he has learned nothing at all from the disastrously cold and
pusillanimous way he handled the Kursk submarine disaster in 2000,
when relatives of the dead were deliberately left uninformed about
what had really happened to their loved ones," the Guardian
added.
The
center-left Independent said: "With the same secrecy and
paranoia they displayed at the time of the underwater accident on the
Kursk nuclear submarine, the Russians have refused to identify the gas
used in the raid on the Moscow theater."
Newspapers
also analyzed how Moscow should now handle the war in
independence-seeking Republic of Chechnya, an end to which the
hostage-takers had been demanding.
Russia's
continued hardline policy on Chechnya would only have negative
consequences. "Already most of Chechnya has been radicalized by
clumsy Russian military repression," said The Times.
It
went on: "Unless Mr Putin can open a back-channel to moderates to
discuss the political future for Chechnya, there will be more
hostage-taking, more suicide bombers and more suffering for ordinary
Russians" as there is for ordinary Chechens.
The
right-wing Daily Telegraph commented: "It is hard to see
how [Putin] can be any more aggressive, short of gassing the entire
Chechen population.
"Eventually
Moscow will have to find some way to address Chechen demands for
self-government," the daily said, recalling that the Chechens had
fought for their independence under the Tsarist empire, the Soviet
empire, and now, enduring famines, deportations and gencoide