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Pro-Russian Chechens To Putin: Make Army Stop Abusing Civilians

Chechen civilians abducted by Russian forces

MOSCOW, November 20 (News Agencies) - Pro-Russian Chechen officials Tuesday, November 19, called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to put end to federal forces’ abuse of Chechen civilians, which they say has increased since last month’s Moscow hostage-taking.

“We are compelled to appeal to you urgently as the holder of the executive power and the guarantor of the constitutional rights of all Russian citizens,” the officials wrote in an address to Putin quoted by the Russian Interfax news agency, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

Exactions carried out by Russian forces have increased sharply after a Chechen fighter commando took more than 800 hostages in a Moscow theater last month, the Chechen officials said.

“In the days following the terrorist attack in Moscow, the activities of federal units in Chechnya have resulted in a drastic deterioration of the political situation in the republic. Military units use armored vehicles on a massive scale to abduct civilians in the dead of the night,” they said.

Massive abuses by Russian forces against Chechnya’s civilian population have been a staple of the military operation Moscow has been carried out in Chechnya for over three years.

Amnesty International recently slammed the widespread human rights abuses in Russia

A total of 128 hostages died in the Moscow theater siege, most from the affects of gas used by Russian forces to quell their attackers. The 41 hostage-takers were also killed.

In a report published in October, international human rights group Amnesty International said that torture, rapes and “disappearances” are common in Russia’s legal “climate of impunity”.

Drafted last June, the report’s publication coincided with a major campaign by Amnesty to highlight the discrepancy between the human rights protection enshrined under international and Russian law and the reality of widespread abuse, AFP reported.

The 125-page report, entitled “Russian Federation: Denial of Justice,” focuses on “specific and serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by Russian law enforcement and security forces.”

In Russia there is a “reality of widespread human rights abuses committed by agents of the state and private individuals or groups (non-state actors) in a climate of impunity,” the report said.

On November 4, Russia announced that it had dropped plans to withdraw some of its troops from Chechnya, instead are stepping up their operations.

“Over the past days, we’ve been receiving information that guerrillas based in Chechnya - and not only Chechnya - are preparing new terrorist acts,” Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov told Interfax.

“I have made a decision to interrupt plans to reduce the number of troops in Chechnya.

“Starting today, our military has begun a broad, tough but well-conceived special military operation across the whole of Chechnya.”

Ivanov’s announcement contradicted his own comments earlier, when he said some of Russia’s 80,000 troops in Chechnya would be withdrawn as planned, despite the October theatre siege in which 119 hostages died after being gassed by the Russian forces.

In addition, Moscow stepped up pressure on the United States to add Chechen groups to its terrorist blacklist, describing the issue as a test of the international coalition against terrorism. 

 

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