Russia 100325 Basic Political Developments


Russia Today: Wahhabi leader killed in North Caucasus



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Russia Today: Wahhabi leader killed in North Caucasus


http://rt.com/Top_News/2010-03-25/militant-leader-astemirov-killed.html/print

25 March, 2010, 09:19

A suspected Islamic militant leader in Russia's south has been killed in a shootout with police.

Officials say Anzor Astemirov opened fire at officers after he had been stopped for an identity check in the republic of Kabardino-Balkaria.

A Wahhabi adherent, 33 year-old Astemirov has been on the international wanted list for four years.

He is believed to have been behind a number of assaults on government buildings in Kabardino-Balkaria, among them an attack on the republic’s capital Nalchik in 2005, which killed 12 civilians and 35 police officers.

25 March 2010, 10:44

Interfax: Wahabi militant leader killed in Kabardino-Balkaria


http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=news&div=7074
Rostov-on-Don, March 25, Interfax - Anzor Astemirov, the leader of Wahabi militants active in the North Caucasus republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, has been killed in a security operation in Nalchik, the staff of the combined force in the North Caucasus informed Interfax.

"A man was stopped by a law enforcement patrol for an ID check in Nalchik at about 10:30 p.m., Moscow time, on Wednesday. He was killed after he opened fire at policemen," a staff spokesman said.

The dead body was identified as that of head of Kabardino-Balkaria's militants Astemirov.

Astemirov is a strong proponent of Wahhabism, the spokeman also said. There a large number of subversive and terror attacks against law enforcement officials on the record of his criminal group. Astemirov was on an international wanted list.

No official confirmation of this report by law enforcement agencies is available to Interfax so far.

Reuters: Russia says forces kill leading Islamist rebel


http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-47205920100325
Thu Mar 25, 2010 1:37pm IST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian forces killed a leading Islamist rebel blamed for a 2005 attack in which more than 100 people died, prosecutors said on Thursday, in the latest success claimed by federal forces in the North Caucasus.

Anzor Astemirov, an associate of rebel leader Doku Umarov, was killed in a shootout with FSB security service troops in Nalchik, capital of the southern Kabardino-Balkaria region, investigators with the prosecutor's office said in a statement.

Astemirov shot at the officers during a routine document check and was killed in a return of fire, the statement said.

Authorities say Astemirov had orchestrated the takeover of Nalchik by a small army of rebels in October 2005. At least 70 militants, 24 police and 12 civilians were killed in what is seen as one of the most brazen attacks in Russia in recent years.

Authorities have claimed a series of successes in recent months following an upsurge of attacks last year in the Muslim-dominated regions of the North Caucasus, which also include Chechnya, Ingushetia and Dagestan.

Law-enforcement officials this month said they killed a senior rebel commander accused of orchestrating a November train bombing that killed 26 and a militant accused of killing an Orthodox Christian priest in Moscow last year.

In recent days Russian-commanded forces said they had killed the top bodyguard of rebel leader Doku Umarov, Abu Khalid, and the leader of his forces in the Chechen capital Grozny.


Riadagestan: The parliament of Dagestan passed the Complex program of struggle against drug addiction


http://www.riadagestan.com/news/2010/03/25/4941/
25.03.2010 , 10:07
Text: Bayram Abdullaev

Makhachkala, March 25, 2010. On March, 24, the 33rd session of the parliament of Dagestan was held in Makhachkala. The President of the republic Magomedsalam Magomedov took part in its work.

The Chairman of the Committee on international relations, on affairs of public and religious associations Surakat Asijatilov presented the bill RD “About the statement of the republican target program “Complex measures of counteraction against drugs and their illegal circulation for 2010-2014”. He spoke about problems and malignancy of drug addiction for young generation of the republic.

“Drugs become the reason of variety of crimes. The increase in weight of the withdrawn narcotics, first of all, heroin, testifies to problem of criminal situation in the sphere of circulation of drugs and psychotropic substances”, - S. Asijatilov said.

The deputy Gamidullah Magomedov also spoke about this question: “It is impossible to pass such program separately. It is necessary to struggle against drugs with the Ministry of Education. For the first time children start to try drugs at school. It is necessary to publish methodical manuals and textbooks on the given problem”.

The Complex program of struggle against drug addiction was passed in the last reading.


RIA: Crew of passenger jet used pocket GPS to make emergency landing - paper


http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100325/158306509.html
11:2025/03/2010

Investigators have said the crew of the Tu-204 plane that made a belly landing in the woods on its approach to a Moscow airport earlier this week used a pocket GPS instead of the primary air navigation system, a leading Russian business daily said on Thursday.

The plane, with only eight crew members onboard, made an emergency landing near Moscow's Domodedovo Airport on Monday, while returning from Egypt. The plane carries around 200 passengers.

The Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC), which is investigating the incident, was quoted by Kommersant as saying in a statement that Domodedovo International Airport was equipped with a special navigation system which allows a pilot to land a plane even in the most difficult weather conditions.

However, an IAC official told the paper that data from the plane's flight recorder showed the crew switched off the system while landing the aircraft and used a pocket GPS instead. Investigators are yet to reveal what forced the crew to take such a decision. So far, the onboard navigation system failure is believed to be the possible explanation for the plane crash.

Experts were quoted by Kommersant as saying pilots have the right to switch from the air navigation system to a manual guidance system if the main system fails. But it is possible to land a plane using manual guidance only in ideal visibility. The weather in Moscow was cloudy with heavy fog on Monday when the crash occurred.

If the crew makes the decision to switch to manual guidance, they are obliged to notify an air traffic control of that decision, experts told the paper. The crew of the Tu-204 plane, however, failed to do this.

Alexander Potapov, the flight director of the Aviastar-Tu air company, which operates the plane, ruled out a possible air navigation system failure, and defined as "nonsense" the investigators' suggestion that the plane's crew used a pocket GPS to land the plane.

"I know that some pilots carry GPS navigators with them on a plane, but we do not welcome this, they should work with standard equipment," he said.

Chief Tu-204 test engineer of the Aviastar-Tu company Oleg Ganovich was quoted by the paper as saying pilots of small planes sometimes use portable GPS navigators during flights. However, he said, it is "senseless" to use them on board a Tu-204 plane as the plane has other equipment in case of an emergency landing.

MOSCOW, March 25 (RIA Novosti)

March 24, 2010


Russia profile: Whose Russia?

http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?pageid=International&articleid=a1269451394


By Roland Oliphant
Russia Profile

Russia’s Million-Plus Tajiks Are Fighting Back Against the Casual Racism that Makes Them Synonymous With Any Low Paid Worker



The leader of a group representing Russia’s Tajik migrant laborers wants the long-running comedy show “Nasha Rasha” to be banned for its “racist” depiction of central Asian guest workers. He has threatened to sue the makers of the show under extremism laws. But is “Nasha Russia” creating harmful stereotypes or just reacting to a much deeper reality about the Russian society?

On Tuesday March 23 a Tajik migrant organization announced its intention to sue the makers of one of Russia’s most popular television series over its depiction of central Asian migrant laborers. Karomat Sharipov, the leader of Tajik Migrant Workers (TMW), told the RBK daily on Tuesday that “Nasha Rasha’s” treatment of guest workers amounted to “cultural genocide of the Tajik people,” and that the movement had petitioned the Prosecutor General’s Office and the Federal Supervision Service in the Sphere of Communication, Information Technology and Mass Communication (Roskomnadzor) to investigate the legality of the show under anti-extremism legislation. 

“Nasha Rasha” is a long-running comedy show whose enduring popularity rests on its not-always-good-taste take on contemporary Russian life. Its most famous characters are Dzhumshut and Ravshan, two casual laborers from Central Asia. Jokes revolve around their incompetence, inability to follow instructions, and their boss’ infuriation at their poor grasp of Russian (Dzhumshut never speaks at all; Ravshan mispronounces every word and repeats every question at least twice with a confused look on his face before attempting to answer it in comically broken Russian). The punch line is their exasperated boss’ exclamation that they are both idiots, and threats like “That’s it! You’ll work for five years without pay!”

Sharipov, understandably, doesn’t find that funny. “It is a most serious problem for us; because we can go unpaid, we can go hungry, we can sleep on the streets, and for five years this show has been going on as active propaganda against the Tajik people.”

The program is a product of the team behind Comedy Club, a hugely successful stand-up show on TNT, a channel that specializes in low-brow entertainment including the reality TV show “Dom-2,” which was recently banned from day-time broadcasts on the grounds that it was “erotic.” When “Nasha Russia” took to the airwaves in 2006 it quickly became one of TNT’s flagship programs.

Its enduring appeal is based on its frank, if not particularly good-taste, stereotyping of recognizable characters in modern Russia. Apart from Dzhumshut and Ravshan, stock characters include a pair of tramps who live off the trash from dumpsters on Moscow’s prestigious Rublyovka Highway, and consequently refuse to eat anything but the finest black caviar and wear the most expensive designer clothes. Then there’s the only honest policeman in Russia, whose family hate him because his virtue keeps them in perpetual poverty, and the two deputies whose constant patriotic pronouncements are belied by their chronic self-indulgence and laziness.

It’s not high-brow, but like all successful comedy, it has tapped a nerve – British readers will perhaps not be surprised to hear that it takes its inspiration and holds a production license from Little Britain, a show that was crudely accurate and outrageously offensive in equal measure. The problem, said Sharipov, is that such is its success that it has begun to set stereotypes in the public imagination. Dzhumshut and Ravshan have become archetypes of the guest worker. Similarly, the character Ivan Dulin, a gay steel worker, has become the defining parody of homosexuality. And so on.

So why take it to court now, after five years of abuse? Sharipov said they had lost patience after repeated assurances. “We’ve supposedly been told that ‘Nasha Russia’ would be taken off air, but it is still there,” he said. But there is also now some extra evidence to take before a court – Sharipov claimed that in the feature-film that the series inspired, the “Eggs of Fate” (“eggs” in Russian slang means “testicles”) Dzhumshut and Ravshan are clearly identified as Tajiks. That finally provides grounds to argue that a national group is being insulted, and Sharipov said the case is also about defamation of Muslims. But in truth, the audience didn’t wait until the “Eggs of Fate,” which was released in January, to make the association. “There’s definitely a widespread racist perception about people from Tajikistan. The word ‘Tajik’ is already used to mean any kind if cheap laborer,” said Alexander Verkhovsky, director of the SOVA Center human rights agency.

The TMW wants a public apology and an end to the broadcast of the offensive material – something “Nasha Rasha’s” producers are likely to fight, since Ravshan and Dzhumshut, in their orange overalls and perpetually confused expressions, are easily the most recognizable and most popular characters, and practically serve as mascots for the show. Sharipov acknowledged that it might be an uphill fight, but insisted he was in with a chance. “We’ve got very good lawyers and we’ve taken very good advice,” he said.

Really that bad?

Russia’s anti-extremism laws have been ridiculed for their openness to official abuse - one recent precedent holds that the police can be considered a “social group” to be protected from defamation – but as Vekhovsky told a Radio Free Europe conference on the subject last year, “they are there for a good reason,” and they can be used to protect genuine minorities from abuse. The prosecutor’s office is effectively being asked to decide where the line lies between legitimate satire and incitement to racial hatred – and it is far from clear.

Verkhovsky himself said that the lot of immigrant laborers was definitely made worse by casual racist attitudes in society, but wasn’t sure that Tajiks were singled out more than any other group of relatively dark-skinned foreigners. And since he said he had never watched “Nasha Russia,” he couldn’t say whether this was one of those occasions. But not everyone thinks the program has crossed the line, wherever it lies. “Nasha Russia is far from the most malignant thing on Russian television,” said Ilmira Bolotyan, a TV critic and scriptwriter. “Compared to some of the so-called humor on the central channels, it is very well produced and the jokes are not absolutely offensive.”

She was also skeptical that the program was reinforcing harmful stereotypes. “I think it’s a reflection, rather than a cause, of the stereotypes in society,” said Bolotyan. “My friends recently asked why ‘blacks’ always work on building sites. When a five-year-old child has the idea that all immigrants from the CIS do that kind of work, it means there’s something deeper than anything TV could create.”

But Sharipov isn’t buying that. “If you want entertainment of that sort, go to the circus. We are not clowns,” he said.




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