Government |
Leaked Snowden Document Hints At Why Feds Are So Sure Russia Hacked Election |
2016-12-30 |
![]() Russian hacking also occurred in the case of Russian journalist and American citizen Anna Politkovskaya, who was gunned down in 2006 in her Moscow apartment after writing articles critical of the Kremlin and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Five men were convicted of her murder, but it’s still a mystery who ordered the killing. A year before she was murdered, Politkovskaya’s email was hacked by Russian intelligence using malicious software not publicly available, according to an NSA document leaked by Snowden to The Intercept. Not only does the document reveal that U.S. intelligence knew about the hacking of Politkovskaya’s email, it also shows that the NSA is adept at tracking cyberattacks by Russian intelligence. The classified internal NSA entry indicates that the NSA was able to use "intercept signals" to pinpoint the source of the attack. The attacks on Politkovskaya’s email account resemble the hacks of Democratic National Committee emails during the campaign that were damaging to Hillary Clinton, and the NSA could have used the same tactics to track the source as it did in Politkovskaya’s case. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Putin's Willing Executioner |
2016-02-05 |
![]() He can be pretty amusing, except when he's terrifying. He's a bit of a clown and more than a bit childish, but he's also one of the most powerful men in Russia. It is pretty much impossible to ignore Ramzan Kadyrov and he knows it. And the rambunctious Chechen strongman seems to be getting more brazen by the day. Kadyrov was at it again this week, posting a video on Instagram showing opposition figures Mikhail Kasyanov and Vladimir Kara-Murza in the crosshairs of a sniper's rifle. This comes just weeks after he called Vladimir Putin's foes "enemies of the people" and suggested in an article in Izvestia that they be placed in a psychiatric hospital in Chechnya--where he promised to double their injections. And, of course, he's widely believed to be behind the assassinations of the investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, human-rights activist Natalia Estimirova, and opposition leader Boris Nemtsov. [snip] What this suggests, according to some Kremlin critics, is that Kadyrov hasn't gone rogue at all. Instead, he is Putin's willing executioner-the leader of a death squad that can eliminate Putin's opponents with impunity, and with plausible deniability for the Kremlin. SMERSH (Russian acronym of 'death to spies') [snip] Of course, Kadyrov the Frankenstein monster, Kadyrov the Kremlin's boogeyman and willing executioner, and Kadyrov the extortionist are not mutually exclusive. In fact, he's probably all of the above. And, according to Moscow-based political analyst Nikolai Petrov, he may have made himself an indispensable part of Russia's political system-regardless of who is in the Kremlin. "Kadyrov has the potential to be a tsar-maker," Petrov told The New Yorker's Yaffa. "Not because he has more men at his disposal than, for example, the minister of defense, but because his men, tens of thousands of them, will carry out his orders without thinking twice. If the minister of defense tells his troops to storm the Kremlin, he can't be sure that all of them will actually do it. But Kadyrov can." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Five convicted in slaying of Russian journalist |
2014-05-22 |
![]() Politkovskaya was killed in 2006 while covering human rights violations in Chechnya, criticizing both Putin and the Chechen leaders. She was gunned down in an elevator in her apartment building by Rustam Makhmudov who was assisted by his brothers Ibragim and Dzhabrail. Lom-Ali Gaitukayev, their uncle, and Sergei Khadzhikurbanov were also convicted for helping plan and organize the assassination. This is the second trial for the convicted men. Ibragim, Dzhabrail, and Khadzhikubanov were acquitted of the murder in 2009, triggering an international outcry over freedom of the press in Russia. The Russian Supreme Court overturned the verdict and ordered a new trial. Though the people who were responsible for the actual murder have been convicted, there is no information as to who ordered her slaying. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russian ex-cop charged in journalist's killing |
2012-07-19 |
Six years after investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya was gunned down in a Moscow apartment building, investigators announced Monday that charges would be brought against a former police officer suspected of conspiring to murder her. According to the investigation, former police Colonel Dmitry Pavlyuchenkov used his official powers to monitor Politkovskaya, whose reporting exposed corrupt officials and brought to light atrocities committed by Chechnya's Moscow-backed authorities. Pavlyuchenkov learned the address of Politkovskaya's apartment and the routes she usually took and gave this information to other conspirators in her killing. He also instructed subordinates to monitor Politkovskaya, according to the Investigative Committee. Pavlyuchenkov also obtained the weapon and the ammunition that were later used in the murder, their statement said. Pavlyuchenkov has cooperated extensively with investigators since his arrest in August 2011. In February it was reported that he had accused billionaire Boris Berezovsky and Chechen rebel envoy Akhmed Zakayev, both of whom live in exile in London, of masterminding Politkovskaya's murder. British authorities have repeatedly refused Russian requests to extradite Berezovsky and Zakayev, saying they don't believe they would |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia | |||
Ex-officer arrested in Russian journalist's death | |||
2011-08-24 | |||
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Politkovskaya was known for her reporting from Chechnya, where she had exposed human rights violations during and after the war there. She died on the birthday of then-president Vladimir Putin. Investigators believe that Pavlyuchenkov was paid to organize Politkovskaya's murder, following instructions from others. It seems that investigators may now have a clearer idea of who gave those instructions. Meanwhile the ex-officer, who was working in the surveillance division of Moscow police in 2006, is suspected of creating a band of assassins comprising the three Makhmudov brothers, Rustam, Dzhabrail and Ibragim. Rustam was detained in Chechnya in May, and is accused of the shooting; his brothers were acquitted of driving him to and from the crime scene in a 2009 verdict which was later overturned by Russia's Supreme Court. | |||
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russia arrests suspected Politkovskaya killer |
2011-06-01 |
[Al Jazeera] Russia has tossed in the calaboose Rustam Makhmudov, the suspected assassin of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who was rubbed out in 2006, federal Sherlocks said. Makhmudov was jugged on Monday night in Chechnya at the home of his parents after being on the run for years, Russia's federal investigative committee announced on Tuesday. Makhmudov's brothers, Dzhabrail and Ibragim, and former police officer Sergei Khadzhikurbanov have been investigated for several years over suspected involvement in the killing. All three were acquitted on a lack of evidence in a jury trial in 2009, but the verdict was annulled by the supreme court and a new investigation reopened with the same suspects. Politkovskaya, a 48-year-old mother of two who published damning exposes of official corruption and rights abuses, was rubbed out in the stairwell of her Moscow apartment on October 7 2006. Reporting on abuses Renowned for her opposition to the Chechen conflict, Politkovskaya also reported on the alleged human rights ...which often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless... abuses of Russian military forces under the leadership of former Russian president Vladimir Putin ![]() . She also covered alleged abuses by Chechen rebels and the current Moscow-backed administration led by the Kadyrov family in Chechnya. Her death came as her reporting was increasingly being seen as a threat to the Chechen government, which has been accused of the rampant torture, abduction and murder of opposition figures. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russian paper to air WikiLeaks corruption material |
2010-12-22 |
Russia's leading opposition newspaper said it would publish new WikiLeaks disclosures unmasking corruption among Russia's "highest political echelons". Novaya Gazeta, a weekly known for its critical, anti-Kremlin investigative reporting, said by joining forces with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, it had gained unlimited access to new material linking Russia's political elite to organised crime. "Assange said that in the near future, Russian citizens will learn a lot of new things about their country. He wasn't bluffing," the paper said on its website. "Our partnership is aimed at exposing corruption in the highest political echelons." The new WikiLeaks material is a trove of "intriguing material" including documents on the trial of jailed oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and on the paper's own slain reporter Anna Politkovskaya, spokeswoman Nadezhda Prusenkova told Reuters. "But what's most interesting to us," she added, "are cables showing corruption linked to the political establishment ... The authorities must be transparent." President Dmitry Medvedev angrily dismissed as irrelevant US diplomatic cables published so far which cast Russia as corrupt. "We don't give a damn about what diplomatic circles say, judging one or another public process in our country. It's only a matter of opinion," Mr Medvedev told journalists on the sidelines of an official visit to Mumbai, India. "What has been published to date, does not weigh at all on Russian interests." The cables describing Mr Medvedev as a side-kick "Robin" to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's "Batman", portrayed Mr Putin as a ruler who allowed unscrupulous officials and crooked spies to siphon off cash from the world's biggest energy producer. But the few disclosures on Russia so far seemed anti-climactic compared with the promise by WikiLeaks, which has unloaded thousands of diplomatic cables onto its website, to publish eye-opening secrets about Moscow's political underbelly. "The American diplomatic cables were just a small part of the whole WikiLeaks dossier," Novaya Gazeta said on its website. "Now none of them is safe from the truth." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia | ||
Medvedev condemns murder of crusading activist | ||
2009-07-16 | ||
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has expressed "outrage" at the murder of a prominent human rights activist, Natalia Estemirova. He has ordered an inquiry into the killing of Ms Estemirova, who was investigating alleged abuses by government-backed militias in Chechnya.
Ms Estemirova, 50, had been gathering evidence - for the Russian human rights organisation, Memorial - of a campaign of house-burnings by government-backed militiamen. The pro-Moscow Chechen president, Ramzan Kadyrov, said the perpetrators of the murder "deserve no support and must be punished as the cruellest of criminals", according to Russian news agency, Interfax. But the chairman of Memorial, Oleg Orlov, has already accused Mr Kadyrov of involvement in the killing. In a statement on its website, he said: "I know, I am sure of it, who is guilty for the murder of Natalia...His name is Ramzan Kadyrov." Mr Orlov alleged that Mr Kadyrov, a former Chechen rebel turned Kremlin ally, had previously threatened Ms Estemirova, and considered her "a personal enemy". In Washington, the White House issued a statement saying the US was "deeply disturbed and saddened by the... brutal slaying". "Such a heinous crime sends a chilling signal to Russian civil society and the international community and illustrates the tragic deterioration of security and the rule of law in the North Caucasus over the last several months," said the White House.
The New-York based human rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Ms Estemirova had been working on "extremely sensitive" cases of human rights abuses in Chechnya. "There is no shred of doubt that she was targeted due to her professional activity," said Tanya Lokshina, HRW Russian researcher in Moscow. BBC Moscow correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, who met Ms Estemirova in Chechnya just six weeks ago, says she was engaged in very important and dangerous work. She was investigating hundreds of cases of alleged kidnapping, torture and extra-judicial killings by Russian government troops or militias in Chechnya. | ||
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Chechen leader imposes strict brand of Islam |
2009-03-01 |
![]() Ramzan Kadyrov said the women, whose bodies were found dumped by the roadside, had "loose morals" and were rightfully shot by male relatives in honor killings. "If a woman runs around and if a man runs around with her, both of them are killed," Kadyrov told journalists in the capital of this Russian republic. The 32-year-old former militia leader is carrying out a campaign to impose Islamic values and strengthen the traditional customs of predominantly Muslim Chechnya, in an effort to blunt the appeal of hardline Islamic separatists and shore up his power. In doing so, critics say, he is setting up a dictatorship where Russian laws do not apply. Some in Russia say Kadyrov's attempt to create an Islamic society violates the Russian constitution, which guarantees equal rights for women and a separation of church and state. But the Kremlin has given him its staunch backing, seeing him as the key to keeping the separatists in check, and that has allowed him to impose his will. "Kadyrov willfully tries to increase the influence of local customs over the life of the republic because this makes him the absolute ruler of the republic," said Yulia Latynina, a political analyst in Moscow. Kadyrov's bluster shows how confident he is of his position. "No one can tell us not to be Muslims," he said outside the mosque. "If anyone says I cannot be a Muslim, he is my enemy." Few dare to challenge Kadyrov's rule in this southern Russian region of more than a million people, which is only now emerging from the devastation of two wars in the past 15 years. The fighting between Islamic separatists and Russian troops, compounded by atrocities on both sides, claimed tens of thousands of lives and terrorized civilians. Kadyrov describes women as the property of their husbands and says their main role is to bear children. He encourages men to take more than one wife, even though polygamy is illegal in Russia. Women and girls are now required to wear headscarves in all schools, universities and government offices. Some Chechen women say they support or at least accept Kadyrov's strict new guidelines. "Headscarves make a woman beautiful," said Zulikhan Nakayeva, a medical student whose long dark hair flowed out from under her head covering, her big brown eyes accentuated by mascara. But many chafe under the restrictions. "How do women live in Chechnya? They live as the men say," said Taisiya, 20, who asked that her last name not be used for fear of retribution. She was not wearing a headscarf while shopping in central Grozny, which she said was her way of protesting. Most women now wear headscarves in public, though the scarves rarely fully cover their hair and in some cases are little more than colorful silk headbands. Women who go out without a headscarf tend to tuck one into their bag for use where headscarves are required. Many people suspect Kadyrov is branding the seven late November slayings honor killings to advance his political agenda. He said the women were planning to go abroad to work as prostitutes, but their relatives found out about it and killed them. Few Chechens believe that. "If women are killed according to tradition then it is done very secretly to prevent too many people from finding out that someone in the family behaved incorrectly," said Natalya Estemirova, a prominent human rights activist in Grozny. Estemirova said two of the women were married, with two children each. Their husbands held large funerals and buried them in the family plot, which would not have happened if the women had disgraced their families, she said. Kadyrov's version also has been contradicted by federal prosecutors in Moscow, who have concluded relatives were not involved. No arrests have been made and the investigation is continuing. Kadyrov's office refused to comment on the investigators' conclusion. The Moscow newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported that some of the women worked in brothels frequented by Kadyrov's men. Many Chechens say they suspect the women were killed in a police operation. The truth of the killings may never be known, given how much Kadyrov is feared. Rights activists fear that Kadyrov's approval of honor killings may encourage men to carry them out. Honor killings are considered part of Chechen tradition. No records are kept, but human rights activists estimate dozens of women are killed every year. "What the president says is law," said Gistam Sakaeva, a Chechen activist who works to defend women's rights. "Because the president said this, many will try to gain his favor by killing someone, even if there is no reason." Sakaeva also said she worried that Chechen authorities would now be less willing to prosecute men suspected of killing women. Kadyrov inherited his position from his father, Akhmad Kadyrov, a Muslim cleric and former rebel commander who fought the Russians during Chechnya's war of independence in 1994-1996. Shortly after war broke out again in 1999, the elder Kadyrov switched sides and brought Chechnya back into Moscow's fold. Ramzan Kadyrov worked as the head of his father's security force, which was accused of kidnapping, sadistic torture and murder. After Akhmad Kadyrov was killed by a terrorist bomb in 2004, power passed to his son. Vladimir Putin, then president and now prime minister, embraced the younger Kadyrov, who has succeeded in ending a wave of terror attacks that haunted the early years of Putin's presidency. But as Kadyrov has consolidated his power, many of his critics and political rivals have been killed. Some have been gunned down on the streets of Moscow, including journalist Anna Politkovskaya, whose death in 2006 shocked the world. In one of the most recent killings, a Chechen who had accused Kadyrov of personally torturing him was shot last month as he walked out of a grocery store in Vienna, Austria. Kadyrov has denied any involvement in the killings. The Kremlin appears willing to continue allowing Kadyrov to rule as he wishes, as long as he prevents another outbreak of violence. And Kadyrov has won the grudging respect of many Chechens for bringing a measure of peace and stability. "People want to believe that things are getting better," said Sakaeva. "They are tired of war." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Jury acquits defendants in Politkovskaya murder |
2009-02-20 |
![]() Thursday's not guilty verdicts are an embarrassing defeat for prosecutors in a trial compromised from the start by the absence of the suspected gunmanand any alleged mastermind. Defendants Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makhmudov and a former police officer, Sergei Khadzhikurbanov, were accused of helping organize and arrange Politkovskaya's contract-style killing in 2006. They were charged with murder and could have been imprisoned for life if convicted. Politkovskaya's probes into atrocities in Chechnya and abuses by Russian authorities angered the Kremlin. Her killing underscored the risks run by journalists and government critics in Russia. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Leading Russian defence lawyer shot dead in Moscow |
2009-01-19 |
![]() One of them was Anastasiya Baburova, who worked as a reporter for the Novaya Gazeta newspaper. She is in critical condition, according to doctors. The reporter is a former colleague of Anna Politkovskaya, the campaigning journalist and Kremlin critic who was shot dead in Moscow in 2006. Markelov was one of Russia's best known human rights lawyers. He had represented the family of an 18-year-old Chechen woman who was savagely raped and murdered in 2000 by a former Russian army colonel. Yuri Budanov snatched Kheda Kungayeva from her father's house during a late-night raid in 2000, killed her inside his tent, and then ordered his subordinates to secretly bury her body. He was convicted of murder in 2003 despite claiming he had gone temporarily insane at the time of her killing and had mistaken her for a sniper. Budanov was released from prison last week, 18 months early. The case prompted widespread outrage in Chechnya, with news of his release sparking protests across the southern Russian republic. Human rights activists said they were appalled by news of Markelov's killing. Baburova had written about the Kungayeva case extensively for her newspaper, colleagues said. "I find it hard to speak. I know and have worked with this person," said Lyudmilla Alexeyeva, head of the Russian human rights organisation Memorial. "The assassination of such a person brings shame to our country." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Accused appear in Russian court as Politkovskaya trial opens up |
2008-11-18 |
The trial of three men allegedly involved in the murder of the campaigning Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya will be held in open court, a judge ruled yesterday. The unusual move, by the military court in Moscow, stunned Politkovskaya's family and lawyers, who had asked for the trial to be open to the public. Prosecutors wanted the case to be heard behind closed doors, and the ruling paves the way for details of the much-criticised investigation to be made public. The evidence in Russia's most high-profile journalistic killing will be laid out in a small, overcrowded Moscow courtroom. Three of the men accused of acting as accomplices in her murder appeared there yesterday, inside a cage. They include two brothers from Chechnya - Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makmudov - and a former police officer, Sergei Khadzhikurbanov. A fourth defendant, Pavel Ryaguzov, an officer with Russia's secret FSB intelligence agency, sat next to them, although he appears in a related case. Politkovskaya, a remorseless Kremlin critic, was shot dead two years ago outside her Moscow apartment block. Russian investigators have so far failed to catch her killer, who was seen on CCTV slipping into her building wearing a baseball cap. They have also been unable to identify who ordered her murder. |
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