Russia 100322 Basic Political Developments


RIA: Militant killed in Russia's Dagestan



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RIA: Militant killed in Russia's Dagestan


http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100322/158272961.html
08:5922/03/2010

MAKHACHKALA, March 22 (RIA Novosti) - A militant was killed on Monday morning in the capital of Russia's North Caucasus republic of Dagestan, a Federal Security Service (FSB) source told RIA Novosti.

"A militant was eliminated during a special operation in Makhachkala," the source said.

He also said an FSB officer was injured during the operation.

"Sappers are working at the scene," he added.

Russia's mainly Muslim North Caucasus republics, especially Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia, have seen an upsurge of militant violence lately, with frequent attacks on police and officials.

The Kremlin has pledged to wage "a ruthless fight" against militant groups but has also acknowledged the need to tackle unemployment, organized crime, clan rivalry and corruption as causes of the ongoing violence in the region.

Itar-Tass: One militant killed in special operation in Dagestan-adds

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=14940644

22.03.2010, 09.39

MAKHACHKALA, March 22 (Itar-Tass) -- According to preliminary data, one gunman was killed and one commando of the Federal Security Service was injured in an exchange of fire.

As ITAR-TASS learnt at the press service of the Russian Federal Security Service Department for Dagestan, the counter-terrorist operation regime was introduced in Makhachkala’s Irchi Kazak Street was introduced on Monday morning. “A militant has been blocked in one of the apartments of five-storey building no 5. He was offered to surrender, however, he opened fire at law enforcers,” the source said.

An investigation team and suppers are working at the site of the incident now.

RIA: Counter-terrorism operation regime imposed in Dagestan's capital


http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100322/158272484.html
07:5822/03/2010

A counter-terrorism operation regime was imposed early on Monday in a street of Makhachkala, the capital of Russia's North Caucasus Republic of Dagestan, a spokesman for the republic's security service said on Monday.

The special operation began as police blocked suspected militants in an apartment.

Russia's North Caucasus republics, in particular Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia, have seen an upsurge of militant violence this year, with frequent attacks on police and officials.

MOSCOW, March 22 (RIA Novosti)



Expert Club: Dagestan on a powder keg

http://eng.expertclub.ge/portal/cnid__3963/alias__Expertclub/lang__en/tabid__2546/default.aspx
22/03/2010 09:57
On March 21st policemen and soldiers in masks blocked all exits and entrances of the village Mutsulaula of the Khasavyurt district with vehicles "KAMAZ". Electric trains were banned from stopping near the settlement. The reason for these measures was discovery of a powerful explosive device near only shop in the village that sells alcoholic beverages.

On the same day three powerful bombs were discovered in 60 meters from the railway tracks in the village Karlan-Yurt of the Khasavyurt district and railway traffic was suspended as a result of this.

A day earlier there were three loud explosions in Dagestan. One was near a private home on Aliev Street in Khasavyurt, another in Trudoviki Street in Kaspyisk and the third was in an apartment of Russian security officer which resulted in amputation of both legs of the owner of the apartment.

Also, a student at the University of Makhachkala was seriously wounded when assembling a homemade explosive device in the village Gonokhi. And a high school student who was near him at that moment died.


NY Times: With Breakdown of Order in Russia’s Dagestan Region, Fear Stalks Police


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/21/world/europe/21dagestan.html
By ELLEN BARRY

MAKHACHKALA, Russia — At a certain point last summer, when snipers on rooftops began picking off police officers, Col. Mukhtar Mukhtarov’s wife blocked the door with her body and refused to let him leave home in his uniform.

For 25 years, it had been one of the great joys of Colonel Mukhtarov’s life to walk the streets in his red-striped police cap. But by last summer all that had been turned so thoroughly on its head that he quietly went back to his bedroom to change into civilian clothes.

His son Gassan, a 20-year-old beat officer, has known the job only this way, thick with fear. He changes in his car outside the station house. Aware that militants often follow police officers for days before killing them — his neck sometimes prickling with the sense of being watched — Gassan Mukhtarov swaps license plates with friends to make himself harder to track. He is still not safe. He knows that.

“They’ve known who I was from the first day,” he said.

It is all a measure of how thoroughly order has broken down in the Russian region of Dagestan, in the North Caucasus. Fifty-eight police officers were killed in attacks here last year, according to the republic’s Interior Ministry, many of them while running errands or standing at their posts. Last month alone, according to press reports, 13 officers were killed in bombings and gangland-style shootings.

The gunmen — some combination of Islamist militants, alienated young people, ordinary criminals and foot soldiers in private armies — just melt back into the city, to be described in the next day’s news reports as “persons unknown.”

As the number of attacks doubled, to 201 last year from 100 in 2008, the authorities tried to offer relief. The blue stripes were removed from most police cars and officers were told they no longer had to wear uniforms on the way to work. In a weird touch, every traffic officer in Makhachkala (pronounced ma-HACH-ka-la), the capital city, is now backed up by a riot policeman in camouflage, Kalashnikov assault rifle at the ready.

Even so, recruits are under pressure from friends and relatives to quit, said Gassan Mukhtarov, who is a lieutenant. He said he could not really blame them.

“If you had a son, would you let him work as a policeman?” he asked. “I wouldn’t let my own son do it.”

The police occupy a miserable place in Russian society, where many citizens see officers as so corrupt and brutal they prefer to settle their disputes alone. But no environment is more hostile than the North Caucasus, where occasional clashes with militants have intensified into something closer to guerrilla warfare.



Russia has been trying to wipe out the militant underground since the late 1990s, when separatists moved into Dagestan from bases in neighboring Chechnya. But because Moscow prefers to cast the conflict as a law enforcement problem rather than a political one, much of the burden of fighting it has been shunted onto the police, said Alexei V. Malashenko, a Caucasus specialist at the Moscow Carnegie Center.

That fight has left behind a residue of rage among the public. Reports of abductions and deaths of civilians are common in the wake of antiterrorism operations, though in the crowd of masked men who whisk suspects away, it is hard to say who works for the federal government and who for the police.

In any event, it has stopped mattering. In a culture that prizes revenge, uniformed police officers are a proxy for all those masked men — for the government itself — because they cannot hide.

Magomed Ataranov, 30, came to understand this after five years on the police force, when he and some other officers trotted over to help a woman who had fallen on the road. The men were laughing over some triviality, and Mr. Ataranov is still not sure what happened, but the woman glared up at them from the ground and said she hoped they would all be killed.

“We were used to it,” said Mr. Ataranov, who left the force a year later. “But from an ordinary woman I didn’t expect it.”

Lt. Col. Mark V. Tolchinsky, lead spokesman for the republic’s Interior Ministry, said attacks on the police rose last year in response to aggressive antiterrorism raids. He was not particularly hopeful about the new safety measures, but said violence had not made it any harder to recruit or retain officers.

“There is no work in Dagestan, if only for that reason,” Mr. Tolchinsky said.

“If one of them left us, how would he feed his children? Would he steal? Or would he go into the forest,” where militant groups are headquartered?

“A war has been going on here since 1997,” he said. “Maybe it sounds improper to say, but our workers only leave us dead.”

For the Mukhtarovs, 2009 was the year their city began to bristle with enemies. A 21-year-old graduate of the police academy where Colonel Mukhtarov teaches left a wedding in uniform, remarking to his companion that they should jump in a cab before someone shot him. Right then, from a passing car, someone fatally shot him.

Colonel Mukhtarov leaves his uniform at work now, though after 25 years his profession seems etched into his body — the prizefighter’s nose, salt-and-pepper buzz cut, fingers as thick as batteries. The collapse of respect for law enforcement grieves him, though he acknowledges that the police themselves are partly to blame because of their brutal tactics in fighting terrorists in the past decade.

“It won’t lead to anything good, the way they interrogate people,” he said. “They’re not supposed to tie a person to a chair and beat him to get him to start talking.” Too many young men vanish in antiterrorism operations, he added, leaving their parents to stammer that “men in masks came and put him in the car.”

But it is hard to stay objective when your friends are getting killed. Colonel Mukhtarov was watching television on a recent Friday night when a news item flashed on the screen that made him jump into his clothes and run to his car. Two hatchbacks had pulled up beside the police chief, Akhmed Magomedov, opened fire on two bodyguards in an escort car and then strafed the chief’s Volga with armor-piercing bullets, leaving him and a driver to bleed to death.

The killing took place on a crowded city street at 10:20 p.m., but the shooters vanished, untraceable. One witness reported that one of the getaway cars got stuck in a patch of ice, and several of the gunmen calmly stepped out to push it clear before driving off.

Colonel Mukhtarov, who had been close to the chief for years, stood for 40 minutes on the sidewalk where he was killed, just taking it in.

His son Gassan was busy that night, and anyway, it is harder to shock him.

“It’s a war,” Gassan said. “It won’t ever end in Dagestan.”

He added, “You do start to want to kill some of them.”

March 22nd 2010 · Prague Watchdog / Magomed Toriyev



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