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Paying The Ultimate Price For Investigating Atrocities

Publication North Caucasus Weekly

01.01.1970 Lawrence Uzzell

Paying The Ultimate Price For Investigating Atrocities

In both Chechnya and Ingushetia, one of the most dangerous things a local official can do is to investigate atrocities against civilians by federal military and security personnel. A May 3 article by Moscow correspondent Alex Rodriguez of the Chicago Tribune reported the heroic but futile efforts of Rashid Ozdoev, an investigator for the Ingush procuracy. Earlier this year Ozdoev submitted a formal report accusing Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) of human rights violations in Ingushetia. His father, a retired judge, pleaded with him to abandon his self destructive quest for justice – but the 30-year-old Ozdoev persisted. In March he submitted another report, this time to the FSB’s national headquarters in Moscow.

According to the older Ozdoev, his son told him: “You can hardly imagine what kinds of terrible things they are doing to innocent people….I am paid exactly for monitoring the situation with human rights at these agencies. I cannot, in front of Allah, bring home my pay without doing the work I have to do.”

On March 11 Rashid Ozdoev’s car was halted by three other cars in northern Ingushetia. Ten gunmen wearing masks covered his and a companion’s heads with bags and drove them away. He has not been heard from since.

Jamestown
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