Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russia: Sentence for school attacker upheld |
2006-12-28 |
![]() Nur-Pashi Kulayev was convicted in May in the attack by a court in southern Russia. The Supreme Court upheld its verdict Tuesday, said Pavel Odintsov, a court spokesman. Ella Kesayeva, the head of Voice of Beslan group of victims' relatives, told Ekho Moskvy radio that Kulayev's trial failed to properly investigate the circumstances of the raid and botched rescue efforts. The Sept. 1-3, 2004, attack on Beslan's school No. 1 by militants demanding the withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya killed 334 people, more than half of them children, as well as 31 suspected militants and 11 Special Forces soldiers. Most of the victims died when explosions tore through the school and security forces stormed the building. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Search for truth in Beslan trial |
2005-06-17 |
"You should be killed and your body thrown to the pigs!" was the daily curse that mothers of children killed in last September's Beslan school attack hurled at the sole surviving hostage-taker, Nur-Pashi Kulayev, when he went on trial in a Vladikavkaz court last month. Yet as Kulayev's version of events inside the school unfolded, it contradicted the version put forward by the authorities in crucial details. As the hearings continued, the women's attitude began to change. After having heard officials publicly lie about the number of hostages inside the school and make other contradictory statements during the crisis, the mothers said they had no confidence in the prosecutor's version of events and found Kulayev's testimony more plausible. Some even started to show signs of sympathy for the suspected terrorist as he told his story of the storming of Beslan's School No. 1, in which more than 330 hostages, many of them children, died. "They've dumped the blame onto this one man; they've found a scapegoat," said a voice from the crowd of relatives and witnesses at the North Ossetian Supreme Court as a handcuffed Kulayev was led past them on Tuesday. The relatives say they believe this haggard and gloomy young man, who avoids looking them in the eyes and speaks in stumbling Russian from the defendant's steel cage, is their only hope to learn the truth about what happened to their loved ones. They say they are even prepared to ask the judge for leniency or a pardon, if Kulayev can tell them the truth. "We need him to tell the truth. And we need for no force to be used against him by interested institutions. ... We need to be confident that he won't die of a heart attack or fall down the stairs," Susanna Dudiyeva, who leads the activist group Committee of Beslan Mothers, said in court Tuesday. At a hearing last week, Kulayev testified that a bomb that had been set up by the hostage-takers detonated on Sept. 3 after Russian snipers shot a gunman who was keeping his foot on the detonators. This contradicted what the authorities said, which was that a bomb in the school gym, where the more than 1,200 hostages were being held, went off after it fell from a basketball hoop. The official version had the bomb going off after tape fixing it to the hoop came loose because of heat and humidity, causing it to fall. The explosion set off the storming of the building by security services and local vigilantes, in which hundreds of hostages died in a hail of bullets and explosions. Kulayev was among a group of 33 gunmen who had been sent by Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev and had arrived at the school early on the morning of Sept. 1. He told the court that there were other gunmen inside who opened fire into the crowd of children and parents in the schoolyard. He testified that the gunmen had so much arms and ammunition that they could not have brought it all with them. Kulayev's account tallied with claims by Beslan residents that the terrorists had prepared the raid well in advance and hidden supplies of weapons at the school. Federal officials have denied that such a weapons cache existed, though several witnesses among the hostages said it did. Kulayev's statements also contradicted the official account that there were only 33 attackers, and that none of them managed to flee the school. Prosecutors say they are not surprised by Kulayev's revelations. "This is his line of defense," Deputy Prosecutor General Nikolai Shepel, the lead prosecutor in the case, said last week. But for those who have lost relatives, Kulayev's testimony appears to fit with their suspicions of a coverup by the authorities, whom they blame as much as the terrorists for the bloody conclusion to the hostage-taking drama. "I will claim all the compensation from the state. What use is there in seeking damages from Kulayev?" Alexander Gumetsev, whose daughter was killed in the school, said at the courthouse on Tuesday. In total, 1,343 people are registered as plaintiffs in the case, in which Kulayev faces life in prison if convicted of all charges. He has denied all but one charge: participating in an illegal armed formation, the legal term the state uses for rebel fighters in Chechnya. After survivors and hostages' relatives showed irritation with Kulayev's long hair on the first day of the trial, Kulayev's head was shaved. During the trial, Kulayev said that his testimony in court was different from what he was reported as saying during the investigation because of his poor knowledge of Russian and that he had signed interrogation protocols without reading them. Dudiyeva asked him Tuesday whether he had been beaten during the investigation. "How come they haven't been beating me? Of course, I was beaten," he said. What followed, no one predicted. "If you tell the truth, we are ready to appeal for a pardon for you," Dudiyeva said. "Just tell the truth about what you know." Prosecutor Maria Semisynova reacted by saying in a mocking tone that maybe Kulayev's status in the trial should be changed from that of defendant to victim. "Who set up the booby traps and hung the bombs in the gym that exploded and killed your children?" Semisynova said. "Were these people not terrorists?" Also on Tuesday, the plaintiffs announced that they would demand to have Kulayev's court-appointed defense lawyer, Albert Pliyev, changed, citing Pliyev's inertness in defending his client. In an interview with Izvestia last week, Pliyev said that he had agreed to take Kulayev's case after being begged to do so by the head of North Ossetian lawyers' association. Other lawyers in the republic had refused to defend Kulayev. Not all of the relatives and survivors believe that Kulayev deserves leniency. Natalya Salamova, whose daughter -- a teacher at the school -- died in the attack, told the court Thursday that Kulayev should be handed over to the mothers so they could tear him apart. During the same court session, Roza Alikova, who lost two sisters and three nephews in the attack, called for Kulayev's execution, even though capital punishment has been suspended in Russia, Interfax reported. Another witness and mother of one of the children held hostage, Ella Dzasarova, told the court Thursday that she saw Kulayev run around the gym on the first day of the hostage-taking, shouting curses at hostages and threatening to shoot them, the agency reported. Two psychiatrists who offered differing expert opinions in another high-profile North Caucasus court case, the murder trial of Colonel Yury Budanov, said they did not believe that survivors of the Beslan attack were suffering from "Stockholm syndrome," a condition that can occur when hostages come to sympathize with their captors and blame the authorities for their plight. "For this to happen, people need to put themselves in the place of a hostage-taker, to understand his motives," said Lyubov Vinogradova, a director at the Independent Psychiatric Association. "This is probably not the case at the Vladikavkaz court." The Serbsky Institute of Psychiatry's Tamara Pechernikova, a senior psychiatrist who during the Soviet era was involved in the cases of several prominent dissidents, said that the plaintiffs were pursuing the only available, and absolutely rational, strategy for learning the truth about the events that affected their lives so tragically. "Kulayev is the only person whom they believe may tell them something in the court that would allow them to demand punishment of all those guilty in what happened," she said. "After his sentence is announced -- and it will most probably be a long one -- these victims will demand more punishment for him," she said. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Beslan gunman says additional attacks were planned |
2005-06-02 |
The gunmen who carried out the bloody school siege in Beslan in September 2004 also planned other attacks, including powerful car bombs in southern Russian cities, the sole surviving suspect of the raid told a court on Thursday. Nur-Pashi Kulayev said he had heard the leader of the armed gang whom he called "Colonel" discussing a plan that envisaged setting off the explosions, AP reported. "Colonel" was talking about placing trucks rigged with explosives near police and security headquarters in Chechnya's capital Grozny and the cities of Vladikavkaz and Nazran in the neighboring provinces of North Ossetia and Ingushetia. Kulayev, whose trial at the North Ossetian Supreme Court in Vladikavkaz began earlier this month, has pleaded not guilty to charges including terrorism, murder and attacking law enforcement officers during the raid on Beslan school. He was the only militant to survive the raid. He could get live imprisonment if convicted. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Beslan gunman gives account of explosions |
2005-06-02 |
![]() Kulayev's testimony provides new insights into the September 1 to 3 raid on Beslan's School No 1. Of the schoolchildren, relatives and teachers held hostage, more than 330 died during the fierce gunbattle and explosions that Russian security agencies said were caused by the terrorists. More than half of the dead were children. Kulayev was the only militant known to have survived. Kulayev, whose trial at the North Ossetian Supreme Court in May, has pleaded innocent to charges including terrorism, murder and attacking law enforcement officers. If convicted, he could get up to life in prison, though survivors and others have called for the death penalty. Video footage shot by the militants has corroborated witnesses' accounts of how the militants strung homemade explosives from the ceiling and the basketball hoops in the school's gymnasium. Some witnesses said the terrorists had rigged up triggers that would set off the bombs if a person's foot was lifted from them. Kulayev told the court of some of the arguments that broke out among the hostage-takers. Some apparently objected to taking children hostage, and several wanted to seize the nearby police station. "The children and women were captured and forced into the school building. Then the militants started shouting: 'The police station is nearby, let's seize it, why seize the school?'," Kulayev was quoted as saying. Two of the militants were female suicide bombers who openly disagreed with the Colonel about the child hostages and were killed when he detonated their bombs by remote control, Kulayev testified. Kulayev was quoted as saying that he spent the entire time in the school's cafeteria, armed with an assault rifle, which he said he never fired. He also said a police officer rode in the cabin of the truck that carried the militants to the school, and that was how they were able to enter Beslan so easily. He said the officer disappeared after the raid began. |
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Kulayev Pleads Not Guilty | |||||
2005-05-20 | |||||
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Beslan awaits trial of lone survivor from the attack |
2005-05-17 |
For 12-year-old Zaur Dzarasov, a survivor of last year's blood-drenched school seizure, there's only one punishment suitable for the only suspect to go on trial for the raid. "I want them to cut his head off and throw it to the dogs," Zaur said Monday, bursting into tears and burying his sobs in his mother Emilia's arms outside the charred ruins of School No. 1, where his brother and hundreds of others died. More than eight months after the standoff ended in a maelstrom of naked, bloodied children fleeing explosions and gunfire, residents and survivors are bracing for the anguish that will be dredged up when Nur-Pashi Kulayev goes on trial Tuesday on charges including terrorism and murder. Kulayev, believed to be the only survivor of more than 30 militants who attacked the school in Beslan, was shown in television footage last year confessing to taking part in the raid. But he insisted he personally killed no one in the assault. Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev has claimed responsibility for organizing the seizure of the school. How the attackers were able to mount their well-coordinated assault undetected is a major issue among Beslan's residents. Susanna Dudiyeva, head of the Beslan Mothers' Committee, which has criticized regional and federal authorities for failing to protect the school and in investigating the attack, said Kulayev's trial will be only a "spectacle," a distraction from bigger issues. "We are more interested in who else will be charged. Who participated in the planning? Who was incompetent? Someone let them in the school. Someone helped them. Someone else did something very wrong," said Dudiyeva, 44, whose son died in the school. "Who answers for the security of this country? The answer is out there in our cemetery," said another committee member, Rita Sydakova. The prosecutor's office declined to comment ahead of the trial. Kulayev's lawyer, Umar Sikoyev, could not be reached. For many Beslan residents, anger and raw emotion trump any talk of justice or presumption of innocence for Kulayev. Some fear the trial will reopen deep wounds. Many resent that Kulayev, if convicted, would receive a sentence of no more than life in prison. Russia has had moratorium on the death penalty since 1996 as a condition of joining the Council of Europe. "I wouldn't put him on trial. I'd just take him out and shoot him," said Zhanna Bigayeva, 45, whose 14-year-old son survived the takeover. "We don't need this trial. We're already living on nerves." Still others said it was unlikely Kulayev would live for long in a Russian prison. "The women of Beslan want him for themselves. We'll take him in our own hands and show him proper punishment," said Sydakova, wringing her hands and tearing at the air. "We'll give him what he deserves." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
4 Beslan accomplices arrested |
2005-04-28 |
Four suspected accomplices of the militants who seized more than 1,200 hostages in a school in southern Russia in September have been arrested, a top-ranking prosecutor said today. Nikolai Shepel, deputy Russian prosecutor general for southern Russia, said the four were suspected of aiding the militants who crowded their hostages into the gymnasium of a school in Beslan. Some 330 victims died in the attack, which ended in a hail of explosions and gunfire. Of 32 assailants who took part in the raid, 31 were killed, officials say. The trial of Nur-Pashi Kulayev, the sole hostage-taker believed to have survived, will start on May 17 at the Supreme Court of North Ossetia, the Russian province where the raid took place. Shamil Basayev, the Chechen warlord who claimed responsibility for the attack, remains at large. Shepel has said previously that six Beslan accomplices were killed, including Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov, who was killed in a special operation on March 8. Maskhadov had denied involvement in the Beslan raid. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Hearing held for surviving Beslan killer |
2005-04-20 |
A court held preliminary hearings Tuesday for the only surviving suspected hostage-taker in last year's deadly school seizure in southern Russia, and his trial will begin May 17. The trial of Nur-Pashi Kulayev will take place in the Supreme Court of North Ossetia, the Russian province where the raid took place, and it will be open to the public, said Deputy Prosecutor General Nikolai Shepel. Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev has claimed responsibility for the attack in which a group of gunmen held more than 1,000 hostages in a school for nearly three days in the town of Beslan. The raid ended Sept. 3 in gunfire and explosions, killing 330 people more than half of them children. Shepel, the lead prosecutor in the case, said 317 of the victims were hostages and the others were 10 special forces officers, two emergency workers and one Beslan resident. Officials said that of 32 assailants who took part in the raid, 31 were killed. Shepel said the authorities had identified 20 of them, including two Chechen women who wore explosives belts around their waists. Kulayev has confessed to participating in the school raid, but insisted he didn't kill anyone. He has been charged with terrorism, hostage-taking, murder and attempts on the life of law enforcement officers among other charges. The charges carry either a life prison sentence or the death penalty. However, Russia has maintained a moratorium on the death penalty since 1996 as condition for joining the Council of Europe, the continent's leading human rights organization. The school hostage crisis was the deadliest in a string of terror attacks staged by militants outside Chechnya, where Russian forces are battling separatist rebels. President Vladimir Putin has ordered security forces to deal "more severely" with suspected Islamic militants in the south, and law enforcement agencies recently have launched a series of sweeps to target suspected extremists outside Chechnya. Shepel said violence in southern Russia was fomented by international terrorists striving to carve out an Islamic state in the Caucasus Mountains region, echoing a claim by Putin and other officials. Shepel's aide, Sergei Prokopov, said investigators uncovered evidence of international terrorist activity in the region while investigating the Beslan attack and a raid in December on a drug control agency office in the southern province of Kabardino-Balkariya. He did not elaborate. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russian commando sez 52 hard boyz involved in Beslan |
2004-11-04 |
While the authorities claim a school in the North Ossetian town of Beslan was seized by a group of 32 rebels, the survivors of the hostage drama and other witnesses insist that in actual fact the number of hostage-takers was higher. As many as 49 rebels, not 32, were killed during the storming, 3 were taken alive and arrested and at least 13 fled, a man who introduced himself as Vassily K. told the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily. Vassily described himself as a serviceman from a special purpose commando unit in the Southern Federal District who took part in the operation to free the hostages. According to official reports, the school was seized by 32 militants. The only rebel arrested was Nur-Pashi Kulayev, Vladimir Ustinov, Russia's top prosecutor said earlier. Ustinov said he strongly doubted that any of the hostage-takers had managed to flee. However, hostages who survived the siege told the press that most of the terrorists wore civilian clothes and clearly hoped that they would be able to merge with the crowd and escape. It is quite likely that some of them succeeded. Former hostages told a Komsomolskaya Pravda correspondent in Beslan that at least four more rebels took part in the siege. Their identities were never established. "There were not 32 rebels, as official reports say, but much more," says Vassily K. The fighter asked not to reveal his real name, although he gave it to the daily. Vassily said he took part in the storming of School No.1 in Beslan on Sept. 3. "I counted 52 rebels, of which 49 were killed and 3 arrested. Apart from them, there were 13 other people, including a female suicide bomber. They managed to flee. Among those captured alive was not only Nur-Pasha Kulayev, as officially reported, but also Vladimir Khodov and a female bomber." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia | |
Weapons found in Beslan traced to Ingush raids | |
2004-09-17 | |
Some of the weapons used by militants in the deadly Russian school siege were pilfered from police posts in armed raids led by one of Chechnya's most notorious warlords, Russia's chief prosecutor said in an interview published yesterday. Prosecutor General Vladimir Ustinov's comments in the newspaper Rossiskaya Gazeta, which is supported by the Kremlin, suggested further evidence that the hostage-taking at School No. 1 in Beslan may have been organized by Shamil Basayev, one of Russia's most-wanted fugitives. The only suspected militant captured alive by Russian forces - a man identified as Nur-Pashi Kulayev - said earlier in footage broadcast on Russian television that they were carrying out an assignment from Basayev and Aslan Maskhadov, a former president of Chechnya. The separatist Maskhadov has denied involvement in the attack.
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