Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Six policemen injured in militant attack in Chechnya |
2016-05-11 |
[RFE/RL] Six policemen were injured in a militant attack at a security checkpoint in Chechnya. The Chechen Interior Ministry said the incident near Grozny on May 9 left three of the police officers in a grave condition. Security measures have been increased in Chechnya as Russia and some former Soviet republics mark the 71st anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany. May 9 also marks 12 years since former Chechen president Akhmad Kadyrov was killed in a bombing in the central stadium in Grozny during the Victory Day parade. Islamist insurgents claimed responsibility for that attack which killed more than a dozen other people. Ramzan Kadyrov, Akhmad's son, is Chechnya's Kremlin-appointed strongman. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Bomb kills Russian soldier in Chechnya |
2013-08-15 |
A Russian Interior Ministry soldier was killed and two more were injured by twin bomb explosions during a search for Islamist The explosions, 25 minutes apart, killed a sniper and caused two more soldiers to suffer concussion and shrapnel wounds." One of them is in a serious condition. The second bomb was detonated as reinforcements arrived in the area following the first blast, according to the police. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Chechnyan newspaper shut down after Putin press conference |
2012-12-21 |
![]() The decision was approved by Kadyrov's son, Chechnya's current leader Ramzan Kadyrov, who said the publication had not asked for his family's permission to use the family name. "It is not ethical in this sense," he said. He also said the reporter had asked questions of a "provocative character" without elaborating. The journalist, Balkhas Dudayeva, in her question, called Chechnya a "zone of peace and stability" and asked Putin what he would do about "negative events moving to the neighboring republics." The newspaper, launched last year to commemorate what would have been Akhmad Kadyrov's 60th birthday, was not unknown to local officials. Chechnya's official news agency praised the newspaper on its launch for its decision to adopt Kadyrov's name. |
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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 |
Putin Nominates Kadyrov for Chechen Presidency |
2007-03-01 |
![]() Speaking at a rights conference in Chechnya on Thursday, Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europes Commissioner for Human Rights, said he had found widespread evidence of torture and other rights abuses on his trip to the region, RIA Novosti news agency reported. Kadyrov had been widely expected to seek the presidency after turning 30 in October the minimum age for presidents under local law. His nomination follows Putins dismissal of regional President Alu Alkhanov earlier this month and needs to be approved by the local legislature a mere formality given Kadyrovs clout. Kadyrov is the son of the late Akhmad Kadyrov, who became Chechen president in 2003 in a Kremlin-conducted election aimed at undermining the separatist rebel movement. He was assassinated seven months later. More than a decade of separatist fighting has left much of Chechnya, particularly the capital Grozny, a moonscape of ruins, but Kadyrov has led a largely federally funded campaign to rebuild. During a meeting with Kadyrov on Thursday, Putin hailed the reconstruction efforts, saying Chechnya has seen significant positive developments, according to televised remarks. He expressed hope that Kadyrov would continue efforts to improve social and economic conditions in the region, so that people Chechnya feel a greater security. International rights groups have accused Kadyrovs security force of abuses against civilians, including abductions, torture and killing. Some have speculated that the October killing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who had reported critically on Chechnya, may have been connected with her investigation of Kadyrovs administration. Kadyrov denied any involvement, saying, I dont kill women. Chechnya has been plagued by fighting with separatist rebels for most the past dozen years. A 20-month war ended in 1996 with the withdrawal of Russian troops after rebels fought them to a standstill, giving the province de-facto independence. Russian forces swept back into the region in September 1999 following an incursion by Chechnya-based fighters into neighboring Dagestan and fatal apartment bombings in other parts of Russia which officials blamed on the separatists. Major fighting in the latter campaign died down by 2001, but skirmishes still break out between rebels and Russian soldiers in the region. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia | |
Former Head of Chechen Force Killed | |
2006-11-19 | |
![]() Movladi Baisarov was shot when he resisted officers seeking to detain him on a main avenue in the capital, said Svetlana Petrenko, spokeswoman for the Moscow prosecutor's office. A prosecutor at the scene, Irina Bobinova, said he pulled a grenade when police tried to arrest him after he got out of a car.
Baisarov's history reflects the volatile web of shifting allegiances and rivalries that contribute to persistent violence and tension in Chechnya, the site of two wars in the past 12 years pitting separatist rebels against Russian forces and their Chechen allies. According to the weekly newspaper Moskovskiye Novosti, Baisarov's force in recent years was under the control of the Federal Security Service, which is the main successor of the KGB and was formerly headed by President Vladimir Putin. However, the newspaper said, the unit the force was attached to was dissolved early this year, and in October police and prosecutors said they were seeking to detain Baisarov on suspicion of involvement in the killing of 10 people. Baisarov had denied responsibility for the killings, blaming Kadyrov for his troubles with authorities and contradicting Kadyrov's claims to be bringing order to Chechnya, Ekho Moskvy reported. | |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
High tech hit on "president" |
2006-06-17 |
![]() Dudayev's killing, in April 1996, resulted from a bizarre blend of high technology and long-distance military intelligence as the Russian air force finally got their man after several attempts. Dudayev, 52, was in the village of Gekhi-Chu, about 30 kilometers southwest of the capital Grozny, when he answered a satellite telephone call from a Russian politician in Moscow who was ostensibly acting as a go-between in impending peace negotiations. But minutes later, two missiles exploded at the exact spot where he was standing and he died of his injuries shortly afterwards. Russian authorities at the time confirmed that the missiles had been guided to their target by the signal emitted by Dudayev's satellite phone. Previous attempts by the air force to eliminate the man whose proud boast was "I have only one bodyguard - Allah," had failed as Dudayev had hung up too quickly. Dudayev had been elected president in October 1991 and proclaimed unilateral Chechen independence the following month. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Sufi revival underway in Chechnya |
2006-05-24 |
Three circles of bare-footed men, one ring inside another, sway to the cadence of chant. The men stomp in time as they sway, and grunt from the abdomen and throat, filling the room with a primal sound. One voice rises over the rest, singing variants of the names of Allah. The men stop, face right and walk in a counterclockwise rotation, slowly at first, then fast. As they gain speed they begin to hop on their outside feet and draw closer. The three circles merge into a spinning ball. The ball stops. It opens back up. The stomping resumes, softly at first, then louder. Many of the men are entranced. The air around them hums. The wooden floor shakes. The men turn left and accelerate the other way. This is a zikr, the mystical Sufi dance of the Caucasus, and a ritual near the center of Chechen Islam. Here inside Chechnya, where Russia has spent six years trying to contain the second Chechen war since the Soviet Union collapsed, traditional forms of religious expression are returning to public life. It is a revival laden with meaning, and with implications that are unclear. The Kremlin has worried for generations over Islam's influence in the Caucasus, long attacking local Sufi traditions and, in the 1990s, attacking the roles of small numbers of foreign Wahhabists, proponents of an Arab interpretation of Islam often blamed for encouraging terror attacks. But Chechnya's Sufi brotherhoods have never been vanquished - not by repression, bans or exile by either the czars or Stalin, and not by the Kremlin of late. Now they are reclaiming a place in public life. What makes the resurgence so unusual is that Sufi practices have become an element of policy for pro- Russian Chechens. Zikr ceremonies are embraced by the kadyrovsky, the Kremlin-backed Chechen force that is assuming much of the administration of this shattered land. Post-Soviet Russia tried to make zikr celebrations a symbol of Chechen aggression, portraying zikr as the dance and trance of the rebels, the ritual of the untamed. Now zikr is held by the men the Kremlin is counting on to keep Chechnya in check. The occasion for ceremony on this day was the blessing of the foundation of a mosque that will be named for Akhmad Kadyrov, the Russian-backed Chechen president who was assassinated in 2004. The mosque, whose foundation rests on the grounds of the former headquarters of the Communist Party's regional committee, is meant to replace older associations. Not only is it an implicit rebuke of state socialism, it is located beside the ruins of another mosque - much smaller - that was being constructed by the separatists in the 1990s. Its scale and grandeur are intended as public statement. At a cost of $20 million, it will be a sprawling complex, with room for a religious school and a residence for the mufti, said Amradin Adilgeriyev, an adviser to Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechnya's pro-Kremlin premier and son of the slain president. The mosque will hold 10,000 worshippers, making it the largest in the republic. Its minarets will rise 54.5 meters, or 179 feet, into the air. It will speak not just of faith, but of power. And so on this day the men dance. And dance. Tassels on their skullcaps bounce and swing. Sweat darkens their shirts. There are perhaps 90 men in all, mostly young. They look strong. But zikr is demanding. As some of them tire, they step aside. Others take their place. Their stomps can be heard two city blocks away. The entrance to the construction site is controlled by gunmen who make sure none of the separatists enter with a bomb. Other young men boil brick-sized chunks of beef in cauldrons of garlic broth, stirring the meat with a wooden slab. Zikr has several forms. This form traces its origins to Kunta-Haji Kishiyev, a shepherd who traveled the Middle East in the 19th century and returned to Chechnya and found converts to Sufism. Initially, his followers pledged peace, but in time many joined the resistance to Russia, and their leader was exiled. They fought on, becoming a reservoir of Chechen traditionalism and rebellious spirit. In 1991, when Chechnya declared independence from Russia, the Kunta- Haji brotherhoods, long underground, fought again. The author Sebastian Smith, who covered the Chechen wars and wrote "Allah's Mountains: Politics and War in the Russian Caucasus," noted how they became a source of rebel resolve. At one zikr ceremony he observed, the men were dancing, he wrote, until, a Russian bomber screamed low overhead, buzzing the village. Smith watched their reaction: "No one even looks up. The whooping grows louder." The Sufis also resisted the influx of Wahhabists who came to fight Russia beside them, but whose version of Islam aligned more closely with the Taliban. Kadyrov said in an interview that he hoped to help restore Chechen Sufi traditions, as part of a way of preserving Chechen culture. He has reopened the roads to Ertan, a village in the mountains, where Kunta-Haji Kishiyev's mother is buried. Her grave is a shrine and a place for pilgrimages, which for years had not been made. This spring the roads to Ertan are crowded with walkers, who visit the grave to circle it and pray. Still, efforts to incorporate Sufi brotherhoods into a government closely identified with the Kremlin contain contradictions. Some see manipulation on Kadyrov's part, noting that Chechen self-identity has never been suppressed, even by some of the most repressive forces the world has ever known. Whether Kadyrov can control the forces he taps into is also unknown. The zikrists dance on this day with state approval. But for whom? "Kadyrov wants to show that he is a supporter of Chechen traditional Islam," said Aslan Doukaev, a native of Chechnya who is director of the North Caucasus service for Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty. "But Sufis always wanted Chechen independence, and that signal is being sent here, too." |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Russias Putin Steps Into Power Struggle in Chechnya |
2006-05-07 |
Russian President Vladimir Putin has stepped into an increasingly bitter power struggle between the two most powerful officials installed by Moscow in the war-torn province of Chechnya, AFP reported. Putin is backing Chechen President Alu Alkhanov as a last counterbalance against the growing influence of the provinces powerful Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov, who unofficially controls a force of several thousand armed men, the liberal Kommersant daily said. At a news conference in Moscow on Saturday, a day after he and Kadyrov met with Putin, Alkhanov said: I have been elected by the Chechen people and I continue to exercise my office. The president restated to me that the federal centre wants political peace and goodwill in Chechnya. Last month, several people were injured in a shoot-out between security forces loyal to Kadyrov and Alkhanov outside a government building in Grozny, the provinces capital. Kadyrovs press service later attempted to minimize the clash, saying it was no more than a run-of-the-mill incident that started after an argument between two bodyguards. Kadyrov, 29, is the son of Chechnyas late pro-Moscow leader Akhmad Kadyrov, who was assassinated in a bomb attack in May 2004. According to the law, he cannot take up the post of president of the province until he reaches the age of 30 in October. |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Kadyrov, Alkhanov shoot it out in Chechnya |
2006-04-30 |
Fears were growing over the stability of Chechnya yesterday after it emerged that security forces loyal to the prime minister, Ramzan Kadyrov, had fought a gun battle with the bodyguards of the pro-Russian president, Alu Alkhanov. Two men were reportedly killed in the clash at the presidential administration, sparking fears of a broader power struggle between the groups of Chechen mercenaries who control the republic on behalf of the Russian authorities. The exchange of fire happened during a meeting between Mr Alkhanov and a Russian official. A veteran journalist of the Chechen conflict, Anna Politkovskaya, reported that Mr Kadyrov was incensed at not being invited to the meeting. Mr Kadyrov, 29, is the son of Akhmad Kadyrov, Mr Alkhanov's predecessor, who was assassinated in May 2004. As well as being prime minister, he is the head of a private army known as the Kadyrovtsi, whose brutal administration of Russian rule allowed Moscow to reduce its military presence in the republic. Mr Kadyrov, already the most powerful figure in Chechnya, is expected to replace Mr Alkhanov as president in October when he turns 30, the minimum age for the post. Yesterday's reports will fuel doubts over whether Mr Kadyrov can keep a lid on the warring factions that compete to control Chechnya. Ms Politkovskaya reported yesterday that Mr Kadyrov insisted on attending the meeting and brought his security men with him to the building's entrance, where a fight broke out. She reported that two people had died in the clash. The Moskovski Komsomolets newspaper reported that Mr Alkhanov had banned Mr Kadyrov from bringing more than two of his private army with him into meetings. It reported that Mr Kadyrov had rung Mr Alkhanov and given him 30 minutes to flee the presidential administration as his men wanted to storm it. Both sides called for reinforcements and there was further shooting before the situation was defused. Mr Kadyrov later rang Mr Alkhanov to apologise, the paper said. An aide to Mr Kadyrov played down the clash, saying Mr Kadyrov had attended the meeting. "It was simply a fight between two young sporty guys who don't know how to use their energy and so had a fight," he said. "No one was killed. One hit the other and he got a bruise." One member of the Kadyrovtsi told the Guardian that four people had been injured in the clash. "Bodyguards on both sides had a quarrel about who they would let into the building, and it blew up." |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Football Killing Fields |
2006-04-13 |
Outrage and disbelief as world soccer body condemns Israel, not Hamas. By Tom Gross Israel is used to being singled out for unjust criticism and subjected to startling double standards by the United Nations, the European Union, much of the Western media and numerous academic bodies. But now FIFA the supposedly nonpolitical organization that governs the world's most popular sport, soccer is getting in on the act as well. FIFA has condemned Israel for an air strike on an empty soccer field in the Gaza Strip that was used for training exercises by Islamic Jihad and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade. This strike did not cause any injuries. But at the same time FIFA has refused to condemn a Palestinian rocket attack on an Israeli soccer field last week which did cause injuries. With the soccer World Cup, which takes place only once every four years, just weeks away, it is a time of mounting emotion for the hundreds of millions of people across the globe who passionately follow the game. As FIFA meets in the next few days to decide what action to take against Israel, the double standards involved could not be more obvious. Up to now FIFA, which sees itself as a purely sporting body, has gone out of its way to avoid politics, and has refrained from criticizing even the most appalling human-rights abuses connected to soccer players and stadiums. NOT A WORD ABOUT SADDAM AND THE TALIBAN When Saddam Hussein's son Uday had Iraqi soccer players tortured in 1997 after they failed to qualify for the 1998 FIFA World Cup Finals in France, FIFA remained silent. Uday, who was chairman of the Iraqi soccer association, had star players tortured again in 1998. And in 2000, following a quarterfinal defeat in the Asia Cup, three Iraqi players were whipped and beaten for three days by Uday's bodyguards. The torture took place at the Iraqi Olympic Committee headquarters, but FIFA said nothing. Again, FIFA simply looked the other way while the Taliban used U.N.-funded soccer fields to slaughter and flog hundreds of innocent people who had supposedly violated sharia law in front of crowds of thousands chanting "God is great." (Afghan soccer coach Habib Ullahniazi said that as many as 30 people were executed in the middle of the field during the intermissions of a single soccer match at Kabul's Ghazi Stadium.) FIFA equally failed to speak out when soccer stadiums in Argentina were turned into jails. AND CHILE AND CHECHNYA FIFA's silence was no less deafening when, according to the International Red Cross, about 7,000 prisoners were detained (and some tortured) in Chile's national soccer stadium after Augusto Pinochet seized power in 1973. Nor did the organization threaten Russia with sanctions after Chechen president Akhmad Kadyrov was murdered by a bomb explosion at Grozny's Dynamo stadium. As for the Middle East, FIFA refused to criticize the decision to name a Palestinian soccer tournament after a suicide terrorist who murdered 31 people at a Passover celebration at the Park Hotel in Netanya in 2002. (At the tournament, organized under Yasser Arafat's auspices in 2003, the brother of the suicide bomber was given the honorary role of distributing the trophies to the winning team.) FIFA also failed to condemn the suicide bomb at the Maxim restaurant in Haifa in October 2003 which injured three officials from the leading Israeli soccer team Maccabi Haifa. ISRAEL IS DIFFERENT... But then last week, FIFA finally found a target worthy of its outrage, and leapt into action. That target was Israel. The international governing body for soccer condemned the Jewish state, and announced that it was considering possible action over the Israeli air strike last week on the Gaza soccer field that had been used for terrorist training exercises. The field, which had also reportedly served as a missile launching pad, was empty at the time; the strike itself came in response to the continuing barrage of Qassam rocket attacks directed at Israeli towns and villages. Only a couple of days earlier, one of those Qassam rockets landed on a soccer field at the Karmiya kibbutz in southern Israel, causing light injuries to one person. Several other Israeli children and adults needed to be treated for shock. The attack was claimed by the Al-Quds brigades, an armed wing of Islamic Jihad. The soccer pitch is regularly used by children and it was only a matter of luck that there were not greater injuries. (Since Israel's withdrawal from Gaza last year, several members of the kibbutz, including a ten-month-old baby, have been wounded after their homes took direct hits from Qassams. Israelis elsewhere have died after being hit by these weapons.) ... BUT NOT QASSAM ROCKETS In an interview with the Jerusalem Post, Jerome Champagne, FIFA's deputy general secretary, who had personally condemned the attack on the Palestinian soccer pitch, refused to extend a similar condemnation to the attack on the Israeli pitch. Champagne said he had discussed the matter with FIFA president Sepp Blatter and that a decision on what action to take against Israel would be announced soon. Champagne, a French national, also sent an official letter to the Israeli ambassador to Switzerland. (FIFA is based in Zurich.) A FIFA condemnation of Israel is no small matter. The incredible passions that soccer arouses in most countries around the globe seem to have few boundaries. For example, it was said that the only time the guns fell silent during the Lebanese civil war was during the 1982 World Cup matches. Individual Israelis, outraged by FIFA's blatantly one-sided decision, have been sending e-mails to FIFA asking why "they care more about the grass on an empty soccer pitch than the human lives saved by strikes on the Qassam launching pads." ANTI-SEMITIC BANNERS AND CHANTS They have also asked where FIFA is when anti-Semitic banners go up in European soccer stadiums, and there are chants from spectators about sending Jews to the gas? And where, they wonder, are the FIFA sanctions against the Arab or Asian countries that refuse to allow Israel to compete in Asia? Other questions have been raised, too why, for instance, FIFA has moved games from Israel because guest teams were afraid to come to Israel, but has never banned any other national teams from playing home games on account of local Islamic violence. Indonesia, Pakistan, Egypt, Turkey were allowed to continue playing matches at home. In response to some of this criticism Champagne perhaps unaware of the phenomena of some radical Jews being at the forefront of whipping up hate against the Jewish state wrote to the Jerusalem Post saying he couldn't possibly be biased against Israel because his wife was Jewish. AP FAILS TO MENTION QASSAM ATTACK In its widely circulated report on the FIFA condemnation of Israel, the Associated Press also failed to mention the Qassam rocket attack on the Israeli soccer pitch. As a result, and not for the first time, AP gave its readers around the globe an unbalanced impression of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The popularity of soccer ensured AP's story was used by dozens of news outlets among others, Al-Jazeera, CBC News of Canada, and the Los Angeles Times. Only the Israeli press mentioned the Qassam attack on the kibbutz Karmiya soccer pitch, an attack which the Islamic Jihad website admits to carrying out. "WE ARE NOT IN POLITICS" The outrage felt in soccer-mad Israel at these astonishing double standards is all the greater since FIFA president Sepp Blatter has made it clear that FIFA should not become involved in politics. Following calls last December from German politicians that Iran should be banned from participating in the forthcoming World Cup (which starts in Germany on June 9, 2006) because of repeated Holocaust denial by the Iranian president, Blatter said "We're not going to enter into any political declarations. We in football, if we entered into such discussions, then it would be against our statutes. We are not in politics." Indeed so emboldened does Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad now feel by FIFA's support that he announced last week that he will likely attend Iran's opening match against Mexico in Nuremberg on June 11. Holocaust denial is a serious crime punishable by a prison term of up to five years in Germany, but Ahmadinejad no doubt feels that powerful international bodies like FIFA will protect him. A BLIND EYE TO DUBAI Meanwhile FIFA (and other sporting bodies) continually turn a blind eye to boycotts of Israeli sportsmen. In February, Tal Ben Haim the Israeli national soccer team captain, who plays his club soccer for the English Premiership team Bolton Wanderers was banned from joining his Bolton teammates for their training matches in Dubai. FIFA pointedly ignored this. So did Bolton despite the fact that the team claims to be among the leaders of the campaign to "Kick racism out of football" in the U.K. Only last week, another English club, West Ham, left their two Israeli players, Yossi Benayoun and Yaniv Katan, at home when they went to Dubai. FIFA naturally had nothing to say. Whilst Israel is often slandered as an "apartheid state," (despite having several Arabs playing in its national team), Dubai has received no criticism for what appears to be a clear "apartheid" policy. Indeed, were Israel allowed to compete against other Asian teams for a World Cup berth, rather than against the likes of England and France, the relatively strong Israeli team would most probably have been able to qualify for this year's World Cup. RONALDINHO AIDS TERROR VICTIMS Not all is rotten in world soccer. Some individuals still seem to know right from wrong. Last week, Ronaldinho, the Brazilian superstar widely regarded as the best current player in the world, donated signed footballs and shirts to Israeli child suicide bomb survivors, saying he hoped his gifts would "warm the hearts of the children who have suffered so much." But FIFA, meanwhile, apparently thinks it is acceptable for Palestinian terror groups to continue targeting such Israeli children, firing missiles from the Gaza Strip, even though Israel has left the area. Tom Gross is the former Jerusalem correspondent for the London Sunday Telegraph and New York Daily News. Among his previous pieces for NRO is "Jeningrad". |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Kadyrov negotiating with hard boyz |
2006-03-22 |
The Chechen leadership is negotiating with militants in an attempt to bring them back into civilian life, the prime minister of the North Caucasus republic said Wednesday. "This is useful and very effective, because returning them to peaceful life is better than fighting," Ramzan Kadyrov said in an interview with government daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta. He said many militants were still following ideas popular in the mid-1990s, when the first Chechen campaign began. "We explain to them that the situation has radically changed, and guarantee [their] life and immunity if their hands are not smeared with blood," he said. "If people do not understand [this], we will fight them, and this is legal according to our customs." Kadyrov said a search for militant leaders was underway in mountainous areas, but added that this should not be confused with zachistki - operations the Army says flush out militants hiding among the local population, but that rights activists say have led to the disappearance and possible murder of hundreds of people. He added that he needed help of Chechen people to detain militant leaders. Chechens are now willing to cooperate with local law-enforcement bodies, Kadyrov said, which have good links with federal bodies and special services. Kadryov also said warlords Shamil Basayev and Aslan Maskhadov had masterminded the murder of his father, first Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov, and the terrorist attack on a school in Beslan. "No one can win freedom and independence by these methods. People such as Maskhadov and Basayev make everyone think that Islam is a bloodthirsty religion," Kadyrov said. Ramzan Kadyrov took over from previous Chechen Prime Minister Sergei Abramov, who was injured in a car accident in November last year and announced his resignation February 28. Akhmad Kadyrov, who fought against federal forces in the first Chechen campaign but later condemned radicalism and sided with the Kremlin, was assassinated in May 2004 during Victory Day celebrations in Grozny. |
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