Latest North Caucasus Weekly Articles
MOSCOW STILL PURSUIING ZAKAEV
In early January the Russian government continued its efforts to extradite top Maskhadov aide Akhmed Zakaev, with Deputy General Prosecutor Sergei Fridinski stated that the British courts' review of Moscow's request for Zakaev's extradition might last for years. The website Grani.ru suggested that the Russian... MORE
REFERENDUM SET FOR MARCH 23
The pro-Moscow administration in Grozny has announced that voting for their proposed new constitution for the republic is set for March 23. Human rights specialists are questioning the legitimacy of both the constitutional text itself and the referendum intended to ratify that text. Artyom Vernidoub... MORE
TAKING A NEW LOOK AT THE HOSTAGE-TAKING INCIDENT:
In this final 2002 issue of the Chechnya Weekly, I would like to focus on a major recent event: the Moscow hostagetaking crisis of October 23-26. Like other key crises of the past decade--the August putsch of 1991, the "October events" of 1993 and the... MORE
…HOW MANY HOSTAGES WERE TAKEN
? On November 28, the website Grani.ru, which has been keeping careful tabs on all information relating to fate of the hostages, reported that the terrorists had taken 979 people captive. It provided a list of those 979 names after scouring other websites and the... MORE
…HOW MANY HOSTAGES WERE SET FREE OR MANAGED TO ESCAPE
? On October 26--the final day of the crisis--the Moscow Times reported that, as of the previous day, "the number of those who have gotten out of the theater since [October 23]" stood at fifty-eight. Those, all of whom the terrorists released, included children younger... MORE
…HOW MANY HOSTAGES WERE KILLED BY THE TERRORISTS DURING THE COURSE OF THE 57-HOUR SIEGE
? None. The one young woman who did perish--Olga Romanova, a Moscow perfume saleswoman--had somehow made her way through the police cordon around the building and then managed to enter the theater. She was definitely not one of the hostages, was reportedly in a state... MORE
…HOW MANY HOSTAGES WERE KILLED DURING THE “STORMING” OF THE BUILDING BY RUSSIAN SPECIAL FORCES USING GAS EARLY IN THE MORNING ON OCTOBER 26
? Approximately 204. On October 28, two days after the "storming," the website Utro.ru predicted: "The number of those deceased at the House of Culture at Dubrovka will reach 200 persons. At the present time, according to our sources, the toll has already reached 160."... MORE
…HOW MANY OF THE HOSTAGES DIED FROM THE EFFECTS OF THE GAS AND HOW MANY OF OTHER CAUSES
? If one accepts the figure of 204 for the number of deceased hostages, it would appear that 203 of them died from the effects of the gas that the Russian special services pumped into the building and only one--Denis Gribkov, born 1972--from gunshot wounds... MORE
…WILL OTHER FORMER HOSTAGES GROW SERIOUSLY ILL OR DIE FROM THE EFFECTS OF THE GAS
? This appears already to be happening. On December 6, Judith Ingram of the Associated Press reported: "Interviews with former hostages and their relatives reveal a wide range of ailments they believe were caused by their captivity and the gas used to knock them out....... MORE
…WHAT WAS CONTAINED IN THE GAS USED BY THE SPECIAL FORCES
? We are likely never to know. On December 11, Grani.ru reported that the Russian Ministry of Health had "left without response" a formal inquiry from the State Duma's Committee on Preserving Health concerning the contents of the gas. "This information constitutes a state secret,"... MORE