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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Beslan militant 'lived to kill again'
2006-05-22
An Islamist militant who was supposedly killed during the carnage that ended the Beslan school siege has been "resurrected" by Russian investigators as a suspect in the assassination of a high-ranking government official. Ali Taziyev, also known by the codename Magas, was allegedly one of the 41 hostage takers who stormed school No 1 in Beslan, southern Russia, in September 2004. According to the official account of the siege, only one militant, Nurpashi Kulayev, survived. He was captured near the school and is almost certain to be found guilty on charges of murder and terrorism this week.
I thought he already had been?
The Kremlin has consistently claimed all other members of the gang - mostly from Chechnya and neighbouring Ingushetia - were killed. But investigators now suspect that Magas is one of two people involved in organising of the assassination of the Ingush deputy interior minister, Dzhabrail Kostoyev, who died in a suicide car bombing that killed six others last Wednesday. "It seems that in Russia the terrorists destroyed by the federal forces don't die but are transformed into zombies and continue executing their black affairs," one newspaper said mockingly.
We've told them to cut off their heads and drive a stake through their hearts, but do they listen?
Maybe now they'll at least try the silver bullets...
Police refused to comment on the investigation but earlier a senior officer told Itar Tass news agency they suspected Magas of involvement in Mr Kostoyev's killing. After the Beslan siege, Ingushetia's interior ministry said the gang leader had been a Chechen nicknamed Colonel, and one of his senior lieutenants was a former Ingush police officer, Ali Taziyev - Magas - who had joined the Chechen rebels.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Foreign and domestic hard boyz involved in Ingush violence
2006-05-20
Criminal forces in Russia and abroad were behind Wednesday's attack that killed a senior local official and six others in the North Caucasus area of Ingushetia, a regional leader said on Thursday.

"Those forces can't reconcile themselves with the fact that life is getting better here and the social and economic situation is stabilizing," Ingushetia's President Murat Zyazikov said, quoted by the Itar-Tass news agency.

"But no one will be able to impose their ideology on us," Zyazikov added.

Law enforcement agencies have begun an investigation into the attack.

Dzhabrail Kostoyev, deputy head of the Ingushetia interior ministry, was killed along with his driver and bodyguard when the assailant drove his car into a police convoy and detonated a bomb.

The bombing left four other civilians dead, all of them in a car that crashed into Kostoyev's vehicle after the explosion.

Last year, attempts were made on the life of Kostoyev, who was head of the Nazran police department at the time.

The department building was fired upon by a mortar in February. One shell hit Kostoyev's office room, which was unoccupied at thetime. In August, Kostoyev was seriously injured by a roadside explosive device while traveling in his car.

Law enforcement officials said the assassination might have been organized by Chechen rebel leader Shamil Basayev.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Basayev likely involved in the killing of Ingush deputy interior minister
2006-05-18
The Tuesday terror attack in Nazran which resulted in the death of Ingush deputy Interior Minister Dzhabrail Kostoyev could have been the work of militant leader Shamil Basayev, Ingush Interior Minister Beslan Khamkhoyev told Interfax.

"We are working on this theory, it has not been discarded," he said.

Law enforcement bodies are actively searching for those involved in the preparation of the terrorist attack, he said.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Suicide bombing, attacks kill 12 in Chechnya
2006-05-18
Violence flashed anew in the Caucasus area of Russia on Wednesday when a car bomb in Ingushetia killed seven people, including a senior police official, and insurgents ambushed an army convoy in Chechnya, killing five soldiers.

The surge in violence followed a battle on Tuesday in an apartment building in Dagestan, a third region in the Caucasus, and underscored the lingering instability across Russia's southwestern territory.

The car bombing in Ingushetia appeared to have been a carefully planned assassination of the senior official, Dzhabrail Kostoyev, the deputy interior minister of the small region, which is adjacent to Chechnya and whose predominantly Muslim population has supplied fighters to the Chechen separatists for years.

Mr. Kostoyev, who led counterinsurgency efforts in Ingushetia, was driving in an armored Chevrolet S.U.V. through the center of Nazran, the region's principal city, at 8:07 a.m. when a car parked along his route exploded, according to Nazir Yevloyev, the Interior Ministry spokesman. The blast shattered the armored car, killing Mr. Kostoyev, his driver and a police guard.

The force of the explosion sent the broken vehicle into the path of another car, which was crushed and then caught fire. Four civilians in the second car died, Mr. Yevloyev said by telephone.

In recent years Ingushetia has been racked by violence, including a large-scale insurgent raid in 2004 in which guerrillas, many in police uniforms, sacked law enforcement buildings and took control of much of Nazran for a night.

The terrorists who seized a public school in Beslan — which is in North Ossetia, the region west of Ingushetia — in 2004 rehearsed their operation in Ingushetia and set out for the attack from a base in the Ingush forest, according to government investigations of the siege, in which more than 300 people were killed.

Mr. Kostoyev survived two earlier assassination attempts, including a bombing and a strafing of his home with small-arms fire.

Insurgents also attacked a three-vehicle army convoy near the village of Nikikhita in Chechnya on Wednesday morning, killing five soldiers and wounding six others, according to prosecutors in Chechnya, who were quoted by the Interfax news agency.

Fighting in Chechnya — where Moscow has been trying to suppress an armed secessionist movement since the 1990's — has declined since late 2004, lessening the strain on the Russian military and its personnel. For example, of the 82 federal servicemen who died across Russia in April, according to the latest Defense Ministry statistics, only 3 died in combat in Chechnya, compared with 24 by suicide and 18 in accidents.

But even as Chechnya has fallen more tightly under the control of Russia and its pro-Kremlin Chechen proxies, intermittent fighting and acts of terror have occurred in nearby areas, and the remaining rebels claim to have set up a wide network of underground cells and units, which they call the Caucasus Front.

Officials in Dagestan battled a small group of insurgents on Tuesday. The fight culminated in a police siege of an apartment building in Kizil-Yurt that ended with the deaths of two insurgents and a police officer.

Anzhela Martirosova, a spokeswoman for Dagestan's Interior Ministry, said by telephone on Wednesday that one of the dead insurgents had been found with a crude map of a local school in one of his pockets, and that a search of the school grounds turned up six small explosive charges at the school's sports stadium. The ministry said it appeared that the gunmen had been part of a group planning to seize the school.

People arrested in the Caucasus often accuse the Russian security forces of planting evidence or forcing confessions. The official version could not immediately be confirmed.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Suicide bomber kills 7 in Russia
2006-05-18
A suicide bomber killed seven people including a top Russian policeman on Wednesday when he drove his car into a police convoy in the southern Russian region of Ingushetia. Among the dead was Dzhabrail Kostoyev, deputy head of the Ingushetia Interior Ministry, two of his guards, and four civilians, a police spokesman said.

The news came simultaneously with a report from Interfax news agency that unknown gunmen had killed the governor of a detention centre in the region of Karachayevo-Cherkessia, further from Chechnya but also increasingly prone to violence. Rebels have pledged total war against police in the North Caucasus, saying they are collaborating with Russian occupiers. Islamist Web sites on Wednesday published comments from a rebel commander in Ingushetia, who pledged such attacks would increase. “This morning the deputy minister was going to work from the village of Ekazhevo to the town of Nazran. A car containing the suicide bomber drove onto the road from a side-street ... at the moment the convoy was passing,” the spokesman said.

“An investigating group is working at the site to find out the details,” he said. Television showed scraps of twisted metal scattered along the road in the low-rise town of Nazran. The twisted wreck of a Soviet-built Zhiguli car was overshadowed by a blue advertising hoarding scarred and pitted by shrapnel. Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya and is inhabited by people closely related to the Chechens, has in recent years seen fighting that has plagued its neighbour since the end of the Soviet Union. “One of our clear duties is targeted work against specific individuals, and also preparation for appropriate military operations to destroy certain targets as an answer to the actions of the infidel,” said Magomed Yevloyev, commander or “Amir” of the Ingush rebels, on www.kavkazcenter.com. He said he had just returned from a meeting of rebel commanders with warlord Shamil Basayev, who has led the worst attacks on civilians in the 11 years of the Chechen war and tries to coordinate Islamist strikes across the Caucasus.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Blast kills police chief in Russia
2006-05-17
ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia (AP) -- A powerful car-bomb blast apparently set off by a suicide attacker killed a high-level police official, two of his bodyguards and four civilians in southern Russia's Ingushetia region Wednesday, authorities said.

Ingushetia's Deputy Interior Minister Dzhabrail Kostoyev was riding to work in an armored car when a sedan packed with explosives blocked a road on the outskirts of the region's main city of Nazran and blew up, regional police officials and a spokesman for the Interior Ministry branch in southern Russia said.

According to preliminary information, a suicide attacker was in the car that exploded, said the spokesman, Roman Shchekotin. He said Kostoyev had been traveling to work in Nazran in a column of three cars.

Four civilians in at least one passing car were also killed, an official in the Ingush Interior Ministry said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record. Russian news agencies said they were innocent bystanders.

Ingushetia, adjacent to war-ravaged Chechnya in Russia's restive North Caucasus, has been plagued by militant attacks, many targeting law enforcement officials and facilities. A concerted attack targeting police in Ingushetia in June 2004 killed 92 people.

Kostoyev, then Nazran's police chief, was wounded in August when unknown assailants detonated a radio-controlled land mine as his car was passing. The ITAR-Tass news agency reported that a mortar shell hit his office in a February 2005 attack, but that he was not there at the time, and RIA-Novosti said his home in the village of Ekazhevo was hit by gunfire twice late last year.

In another republic of the North Caucasus, Karachayevo-Cherkessiya, unidentified assailants fatally shot the acting chief of a prison in the city of Cherkessk early Wednesday outside his home.

Poverty, corruption and persecution connected with Islam have fueled anger at the authorities in the North Caucasus, an ethnically mixed strip of republics, most of which have large Muslim populations.

The region is troubled by violence in some cases linked to the persistent conflict in neighboring Chechnya, where two wars have been fought in the past 12 years between federal forces and separatist Chechen rebels who increasingly have espoused extremist Islamic ideology.
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Failed assassination attempt against Ingush leader
2005-08-25
Two bombs exploded Thursday on a roadside in Ingushetia, wounding the southern Russian republic's prime minister in an apparent assassination attempt, officials said - the latest sign of growing violence across the heavily Muslim North Caucasus region.

Ingushetia Prime Minister Ibragim Malsagov was hospitalized after the attack in the city of Nazran, but his life was not in danger, said Fyodor Shcherbakov, an aide to the Kremlin envoy to the region.

Malsagov's driver was killed and two other people were wounded in addition to Malsagov, said Nikolai Ivashkevich, a spokesman for the southern regional branch of the Emergency Situations Ministry. Malsagov, the second highest-ranking official in the region, was hurt in the hand and the leg.

The top police official in Ingushetia, Interior Minister Beslan Khamkhoyev, said two explosives placed about 10-15 yards apart detonated within 10 seconds, the Interfax news agency reported. The attack occurred near one of the city's outdoor markets as Malsagov's motorcade passed.

Lying in a hospital bed with bandages wrapped around his head and hand, Malsagov told state-run Channel One television that he had been traveling on a road near his home in the middle of a three-car motorcade when there was an explosion in front by the first vehicle.

``Naturally, I automatically jumped out to run over and see what happened, and then there was another explosion,'' Malsagov said. He blamed ``forces that want to destabilize the situation.''

Russian television networks showed footage of what appeared to be Malsagov's black Mercedes, its rear window a maze of cracked glass, and of a deep crater by the roadside.

Nazran is the main city in the Ingushetia region, which has suffered frequent spillover violence from neighboring Chechnya to the east, as well as attacks by its own militants and criminal gangs.

The top prosecutor for southern Russia, Deputy Prosecutor General Nikolai Shepel, said in televised comments that the attack seemed to have ``the same signature'' as other terrorist attacks that have struck the North Caucasus, adding, ``I mean the international organizations that unfortunately are present in the south of Russia.''

Russian authorities are eager to link their fight against militants in the North Caucasus with the international struggle against terror, and often point to alleged international involvement in attacks in the region. Government critics say flawed Kremlin ethnic policy and corruption among regional leaders are major causes of the violence.

Last week, Nazran police chief Dzhabrail Kostoyev was wounded when unknown assailants detonated a radio-controlled land mine as his car was passing.

The republic's police and security forces were also targeted in a devastating overnight assault by militants in June 2004, in which some 90 people were killed. Chechen rebel leader Shamil Basayev claimed responsibility for that attack and for the hostage crisis that killed more than 330 people last September at a school in Beslan in North Ossetia, which borders both Chechnya and Ingushetia.

The republic on Chechnya's eastern border, Dagestan, has also been plagued by frequent bombings and other attacks targeting government and law enforcement officials.

Authorities in other republics of the North Caucasus have also battled militants they say are Islamic extremists. Analysts have expressed concern that major violence could break out in the region even as Russian and local government officials assert that life is returning to normal in Chechnya, devastated by two separatist wars in the past decade.

In the Stavropol region, north of the band of largely Muslim republics, one police officer a two gunmen were killed in a shootout Thursday in the village of Yanangui, a duty officer at the regional Interior Ministry said. Another gunman was detained.

The Interfax news agency quoted an unidentified regional police official as saying the gunmen were suspected Islamic extremists.
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