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French Paper Reminds World of “Forgotten Genocide” in Chechnya

The Observateur showed pictures of the Russian barbaric war against Chechens.

PARIS, June 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – All human rights groups in the world should not forget the genocide and war crimes committed by the Russian army against the people of Chechnya, a French newspaper said.

In an article entitled “The Forgotten Genocide” published Thursday, June 20, 2002, the weekly Nouvel Observateur said: “No one should forget the torture the Chechens were subjected to at the hands of the Russian army, including electric shocks, beating to death, and the amputation of body parts.”

Describing the Russian soldiers’ crimes against the Chechens in 1994 and 1999 as acts of genocide against children, women and freedom fighters, the French paper put the death toll of the Chechen victims at between 50-100 thousand.

The one aim of the Chechen fighters’ struggle is to get their freedom and force the Russian army out of their land, the paper said, adding that it is in this context that Chechen operations against Russian soldiers are launched.

Russian President Vlademir Putin accused the Chechen freedom fighters of being terrorists, something Europeans have not accepted, the paper said.

The Observateur showed in its article a collection of pictures taken by journalist and human rights activist Stanley Green, proving that the Russians launched a barbaric war against the Chechen people.

The paper also conducted interviews with some of the survivors of this war who talked about their horrible memories during a war of genocide by the Russians.

Mussa, a Chechen young cab driver who was kidnapped and brutally tortured by the Russian soldiers to force his parents to pay a $1500 ransom to let him go, said that the Russian soldiers tied one of his hands to a ceiling for 4 running till his hand fell of, the paper said.

“I was blindfolded and when they took it off I found myself with one hand, and then they started wetting my body and giving me electric shocks,” he said.

Mussa told the Observateur that the Russian soldiers forced him to sign a statement confessing to his being one of the fighters, when he was no more than a cab driver.

Malika, a 25 year-old Chechen refugee and a mother of three, said that armed Russian soldiers, accompanied by fierce dogs, abducted her from her home in the village of Tsotestan in 1999, forcing her to leave her children, including a baby.

“They threatened to take me to a torture camp in northern Chechnya if I did not reveal the fighters’ hideouts,” she said. “The next day, they took me to one of the fighters houses where they killed 23 of them, then started a brutal process of mangling their bodies before my very eyes: they cut their fingers and ears off, ripped off their bellies and burned their bodies,” she added.

The Russians also arrested a number of members of parliament in 1999, and they killed two of them in May 2000.

While in detention, the MPs were indescribably humiliated by the Russians, said Hussein Ashanof, a MP abducted in My 2000.

“We weren’t allowed to go to bathrooms and they starved us for long periods,” he said.

The genocide crimes against the Chechens are not over yet, said Abti Shagosef, former ruler of Tsotestan in 1997.

“They broke into my house April 12, 2002, in Grozni, shot at me and my wife, made us kneel on the floor and started terrorizing us by shooting their gun fires all around the house,” he added.

History

The Chechnya tragedy started during the Soviet era, when Stalin, in order to maintain power and to prevent overthrow "by external powers manipulating internal ethnic groups", was brutal in his control of the Chechen people.

The Chechens therefore actually said they would welcome Germany if they recognized an independent Chechnya. This led to a mass deportation and relocation of Chechen people (and others) to Kazakhstan and Siberia.

Around 800,000 people are said to have been relocated this way. Perhaps 100,000 or more of these people died due to the extreme conditions.

Chechnya later declared independence in 1991 after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The 1994-96 war left 80,000 casualties. The Russian assault devastated Grozny and other parts of Chechnya.

However, the Chechens defeated Russia, revealing how poor Russian military capabilities were. Earlier in 1999, the Islamic uprising in the neighboring Dagestan region of Russia resulted in accusations by Moscow that Chechen government forces supported a Dagestan rebellion.

While this was denied, Chechen fighters (that are not controlled by the central government) did support the Islamic uprising in Dagestan. This incursion led to a conflict with Russian forces that defeated the Chechens.

Following the Chechen defeat in Dagestan, Moscow suffered bomb blasts believed to be by various independence activists (although never proven). This has also led to a rise in Russia of racist sentiments against people mainly from the Caucasus regions.

Russia is now engaged in a full-scale war with Chechnya. There have been many reports of bombing raids by Russian forces and over 200,000 people are said to have fled from Chechnya.

Grozny and other parts of Chechnya are being pounded and destroyed. Once more, the civilian population is caught in the middle. Civilian casualties have been high and there has been international outcry at the brutal Russian crackdown and indiscriminate bombing and targeting of civilians.

The Russian troops have been looting and burning homes and buildings, even executing those who resist.

On April 20, 2000, Chechen President, Ashlan Mashkadov, made a ceasefire offer. However, Russian demands have been stern, which triggered more suicide attacks and increased warfare by the Chechen combatants, indicating that the conflict is far from over.

As Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported in April 2001, "the U.N. Commission on Human Rights adopted a resolution on Chechnya that condemned serious human rights violations by Russian forces, and raised concern about forced disappearances, torture, and summary executions.

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