MOSCOW,
November 28 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The bodies of the 41
Chechen fighters who stormed a Moscow theater last month in what they
said was a retaliation for Russia’s deadly war against the Chechen
people, remain unburied, police officials said Wednesday, November 27,
as quoted by ITAR-TASS news agency.
The
bodies of 22 men and 19 women had been left in Moscow morgues and it
remained unclear if the bodies would be sent to Chechnya or buried
near Moscow, given the vehement opposition of some Russian officials
to the idea of delivering the bodies to their relatives in Chechnya,
as custom dictates, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
bodies of the 41 Chechen fighters "should be buried in a nameless
cemetery in an unmarked grave. Otherwise rebel leaders will turn their
funeral into a glorifying show," said Anatoly Kulikov, chief of
Russian parliament's anti-terrorism committee.
The
41 Chechen fighters were killed by Russian special forces who ended
the hostage-taking crisis by assaulting the theater October 26 and
pumping a fatal gas in the auditorium, killing at least 129 Russian
hostages in the process.
Russian
officials who refuse to return the Chechens’ bodies to their kin for
burial say the bodies are kept in morgues for identification purposes,
said AFP.
On
another front, the United Nations expressed alarm Wednesday at the
planned closure next weekend of a refugee camp in southern Russia
which houses more than 1,000 refugees from the war in Chechnya.
Russian
authorities have said they will close the camp, at Aki Yurt, in
Ingushetia - a republic bordering on Chechnya - Sunday, December 1.
While
the refugees might wish to return to Chechnya, "they are
reluctant to do so at this point because of insecurity and the lack of
shelter, basic services and economic opportunities," U.N.
Emergency Relief Coordinator Kenzo Oshima said.
"Returns
can only be considered voluntary if no risk exists to returnees' life,
safety, liberty or health," he said in a statement expressing
"alarm" at the imminent closure of Aki Yurt.
In
Moscow Monday, Ingush deputy Prime Minister Magomet Markhiyev said no
refugee would be forced to go back to Chechnya.
"All
in all, we have received statements by 10,000 people wishing to leave
the camps," Markhiyev said, adding that they would be
accommodated in private houses.
A
total of 110,000 people are estimated to have fled to Ingushetia since
the beginning of the second Chechen war three years ago, and 27,000 of
them are believed to be in camps. The others are living in rented
rooms in private homes or disused factories.
The
U.N. is currently providing protection and assistance to more than one
million people in Igushetia and Chechnya, Oshima's office said