Latest North Caucasus Weekly Articles

OSCE GOES POLITICAL?

On July 9, Gazeta.ru reported that, three days previously, the eleventh annual session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe had opened in Berlin. "The OSCE parliamentarians' attack on the [Russian] antiterror campaign," the website wrote, "proved to be... MORE

USTINOV SAYS MASS EXECUTIONERS ARE CHECHENS.

On July 10, it was reported that Lord Judd of PACE had arrived in Moscow for meetings of the joint Duma-PACE working group on Chechnya. Judd and the leader of the Duma delegation, Dmitry Rogozin, were scheduled to have talks at the Russian Procurator General's... MORE

ANNE NIVAT RETURNS TO CHECHNYA.

The well-known French journalist Anne Nivat, whose book "Chienne de Guerre: A Woman Reporter Behind the Lines of the War in Chechnya" (Public Affairs, 2001), has been translated into seven languages, recently returned from a three-week visit to Chechnya. As is her usual practice, she... MORE

SOLDIERS VANDALIZE MEMORIAL OFFICE.

On July 18, during the course of a "cleansing operation," armed men from the federal forces based in Chechnya unlawfully broke down a locked door and then entered the reception area of the Grozny (Djohar) office of the leading Russian human rights organization Memorial. Only... MORE

LIST OF MISSING PUBLISHED.

The same day the armed incursion occurred, Memorial published a list of the names of 447 persons who had been taken into custody by the federal forces and had then been either directly murdered by them or had "disappeared." In addition to the full name... MORE

ASLAKHANOV INTERVIEWED.

The July 19 issue of the newspaper Novye Izvestia, under the headline "Chechen Boomerang," carried the text of a lengthy interview with retired MVD general Aslambek Aslakhanov, the elected deputy from Chechnya to the Russian State Duma. Aslakhanov described to correspondent Said Bitsoev what he... MORE

UMAZHEVA PROFILED–“THE FINAL STRAW”.

In the July 15 (no. 50) issue of Novaya Gazeta, award-winning Russian war correspondent Anna Politkovskaya profiled Malika Umazheva, the pro-Moscow chief of administration of the Chechen settlement of Alkhan-Kala who had been elected to that post in July of 2001 by the residents of... MORE

KEY TO PEACE PLAN IS “SPECIAL STATUS”.

The July 16 issue of Moskovskie Novosti contains an interview by the well-known journalist Sanobar Shermatova with Professor Ruslan Khasbulatov, a former speaker of the Russian parliament and an ethnic Chechen. Khasbulatov had drafted and published a "Peace Plan for the Chechen Republic" after which... MORE

HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP WORRIED ABOUT SULTYGOV APPOINTMENT.

Leading Russian human rights spokesmen have voiced strong reservations about the recent appointment of Abdul-Khakim Sultygov, a 40-year-old ethnic Chechen, as President Putin's new special representative for human rights in Chechnya. The chairman of Memorial, Oleg Orlov, for example, doubted that Sultygov would have any... MORE