Posts Tagged ‘Ramzan Kadyrov’

Chechen president sues over claim he had activist killed

July 19, 2009

Human rights group will not retract its assertion that campaigner was shot dead with official backing

Luke Harding in Moscow

The Observer, Sunday 19 July 2009

Human rights campaigners in Russia said yesterday that they were prepared to defend themselves in court after Chechnya‘s president, Ramzan Kadyrov, announced he was suing over claims that he is a murderer.

Oleg Orlov, head of the Memorial human rights organisation, said he stood by remarks he made last week after the killing of the human rights activist Natalia Estemirova.

Estemirova, 50, was abducted last Wednesday from her home in Chechnya’s capital, Grozny. Her body was discovered in the neighbouring republic of Ingushetia. She had been shot in the head and chest.

Estemirova worked for Memorial in Grozny for nearly a decade and documented extrajudicial killings, disappearances and numerous other human rights abuses in the Muslim republic under Kadyrov’s rule. She was a close friend of Anna Politkovskaya, the journalist who was shot dead in Moscow in October 2006.

Continued >>

Trial into the murder of human rights journalist Anna Politkovskay

December 2, 2008

Livewire.amnesty.org

Friederike Behr blogs from Russia on the Anna Politkovskaya murder trial

Anna Politkovskaya - murdered on 6 October 2006. ©Katja Tähjä

Anna Politkovskaya – murdered on 6 October 2006. ©Katja Tähjä

Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya was murdered on 6 October 2006 in Moscow. She was shot on a Saturday afternoon, when she walked into the lift in the apartment building she lived in.

I had met her several times, one time right after Russian special forces had stormed a theatre in Moscow, where a group of men and women had taken over 800 people hostage. Anna Politkovskaya had tried to intervene and help to save the lives of those in the theatre. Subsequently, the theatre was stormed and about 150 people died.

Another time, in the Caucasus, she had just returned from meeting then Chechen prime minister Ramzan Kadyrov. He and his assistant had issued quite serious threats against her. Both times I was very much impressed by the way she responded to such experiences, not stepping back an inch, determined to continue her work.

Anna Politkovskaya had reported about the human rights situation in Chechnya since 1999 for the newspaper Novaya Gazeta . Her fearless and dedicated coverage of the conflict had been acknowledged through numerous awards including the Global Award for Human Rights Journalism from Amnesty International UK in 2001. She had also written extensively about abuses in other parts of Russia such as violence in the army, corruption in state structures, and police brutality.

Anna Politkovskaya faced intimidation and harassment from the Russian and Chechen authorities due to her outspoken criticism of government policy and action. She had been detained and threatened with serious reprisals for her reporting on several occasions.

Amnesty International campaigned throughout the period of investigation into her murder for the investigation to be full, thorough and impartial and for everyone involved in her murder to be brought to justice in procedures in line with international fair trial standards. Amnesty International members around the world have campaigned for this for the last two years.

The trial into her murder started with a preliminary hearing in October 2008, the first public hearing took place on 17 November.

Amnesty International was deeply concerned about the decision of the judge at Moscow’s District Military Court on 19 November to close the hearing based on expressions of fear from the side of the jury. No member of the jury had received any threats and as it turned out later, when one of the jury members went public and gave an interview to the Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy, the jury had not requested for the trial to be held in camera.

At the next hearing, on 25 November, it was decided to open the trial again. The office of the prosecutor general questioned the judges impartiality but at the moment, he will continue to preside over the trial.

These twists and changes in the trial procedures make it even more important for Amnesty International to monitor the trial and to try to inform its membership as much as possible about it. Monitoring the trial and reporting about it may help to combat impunity and that’s why I’ll be there.

Putin in the dock

November 19, 2008

The alleged assassins of Russian war journalist Anna Politkovskaya are on trial. So too is the reputation of Vladimir Putin

The main news from the trial of Anna Politkovskaya’s alleged assassins, which began in Moscow yesterday, is the fact that the process is open to the media and the public.

The case is being heard by the Moscow district military court, most probably because one of the defendants is Pavel Ryaguzov, lieutenant colonel of Russia’s Federal Security Service.

It is for this reason too that Polikovskaia’s children, Ilia and Vera, were sure that the judge would close the proceedings as the prosecution demanded. But he did not – perhaps because this is one of very few cases of multiple political assassinations in Russia in which the prosecution is truly interested in achieving a convincing conviction and in proving to the world that Russian courts are independent and fair.

The prosecution needs a conviction, and a conviction that at least looks cogent, because Prime Minister Putin, Russia’s president at the time of the assassination wants it.

After Politkovskaya was killed he said that her death did much more harm to Russia than her writing. This was certainly true: Politkovskaya’s assassination resulted in an avalanche of unfavourable publicity for Putin’s Russia abroad, while her publications, particularly about the realities of Russia’s second Chechen war and its outcomes, were not at all popular among the majority of the Russian population.

She was outspoken about the methods the Russian forces used in Chechnya, about the methods of their allies among the local population and about the order that they created and maintained in the wake of the war. These were not pretty stories, and few Russians wanted to be bothered with them.

But facing the barrage of criticism abroad, Putin promised that Politkovskaya’s assassins would be found. He may have created the Russia in which more journalists have been killed in the last 10 years than anywhere else in the world, except Iraq, but he certainly did not need Politkovskaya to die.

There could be any number of others who did. She received death threats from different quarters, from Chechnya, to Moscow, to Khanty-Mansiisk.

According to the chief editor of the Novaya Gazeta for which she worked (and which lost several other of its journalists to killers) at the time of her death she was working on an article which outlined the involvement of Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechnya’s pro–Russian prime minister, in the kidnapping of his political opponents.

The four accused in the trial are Ryaguzov, who is said to have provided Politkovskaya’s home address to the killers; two Chechens, the brothers of Rustam Makmudov who is said to have actually pulled the trigger but who has not been found; and Sergei Khadzhikurbanov, a police investigator from the organised crime unit of the Moscow police.

It is not impossible that these people will be found in this or that way guilty, although the absence of the main accused is beyond irony. But Ramzan Kadyrov, whose name comes up in the investigation materials, has not been asked to testify.

Anna Politkovskaya lived a difficult life. From 1999 onwards she often went to the war zones and refugee camps in Dagestan, Ingushetia and Chechnya. In December 1999 she organised the evacuation of 89 people from an old people’s home in Grozny, Chechnya’s capital, bombed by the Russian forces, and then found accommodation for them in Russia.

Later she initiated charitable action to provide food, medicines and clothing for those who returned to Chechnya and found themselves destitute. She personally accompanied three tons of collected goods to Chechnya. In October 2002, when Chechen terrorists took hostage several hundred people in a Moscow theatre, she was one of the people with whom the terrorists agreed to speak.

She went into the building accompanied by only one other person in an attempt – it proved futile – to negotiate. In 2004 she survived an attempt to poison her. She investigated corruption in the defence ministry and among the high command of the Russian army contingent in Chechnya. She was certainly not loved for all that.

Her trial is not going to be an easy matter, either – that is if the court really wants to find out who ordered her death.

Chechen leader ‘should testify’ at Politkoskaya trial

November 18, 2008

November 17, 2008

Russian human rights advocate, journalist and author Anna Politkovskaya

(JENS SCHLUETER/AFP/Getty Images)

Anna Politkosvkaya was Russia’s best known investigative reporter

Image :1 of 3

The President of Chechnya should be called to give evidence in the Anna Politkovskaya murder trial, one of her lawyers said today.Ramzan Kadyrov should answer questions in the case against four men accused of involvement in the killing of the campaigning journalist, Karinna Moskalenko, who represents Ms Politkovskaya’s family, said.

She said that Chechnya’s feared strongman had not been questioned by investigators although he was repeatedly mentioned in case files and witness accounts. Ms Moskalenko added that Mr Kadyrov had “threatened Politkovskaya”.

Ms Politkovskaya repeatedly criticised the Chechen leader in her reports for Novaya Gazeta newspaper and accused militias loyal to him of carrying out acts of torture.

“Questioning him is important to the case,” said Ms Moskalenko. “The investigators also ignored the fact that the murder took place on Vladimir Putin’s birthday.”

The demand came after Moscow District Military Court ruled at the opening of the trial that the case against the defendants should be heard in public. Judge Yevgeny Zubov rejected prosecution arguments that the case should be heard in secret because one of the accused is a former agent with the Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor to the Soviet Union’s KGB.

The decision was a surprise victory for the Politkovskaya family, who had been pressing for an open trial. Military courts normally hear cases in secret because they are presumed to involve sensitive material.

“I did not expect that this decision would be taken. With this judge there is the chance of a fair trial,” Ms Moskalenko told reporters.

The former FSB officer Pavel Ryaguzov is said to have provided the journalist’s home address to her alleged assassin. That man, Rustam Makhmudov, is not on trial, however.

He has disappeared since being accused of killing Politkovskaya and investigators believe that he has fled the country. Two of his brothers, Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makhmudov, are on trial, accused of tracking Ms Politkvoskaya’s movements in the two weeks before she was gunned down in the lobby of her apartment building in Moscow.

The fourth defendant is Sergei Khadzhikurbanov, a former investigator with the organised crime unit of Moscow police. All four have denied the charges.

Investigators have still failed to identify who might have ordered the journalist to be killed and why. Defence lawyer Murad Mussayev dismissed the case as a trial of “two drivers and a go-between”.

He said: “We want the world to see that the goal of this trial is to show that a major crime has been solved when that is not true.”

Ms Politkovskaya was shot on Vladimir Putin’s 54th birthday in October 2006, sparking international outrage and fears that critics of the Kremlin were being silenced. Mr Putin, who was then President, initially remained silent but pledged days later that the killers would be caught, calling the journalist’s death “an unacceptable crime that cannot go unpunished.”

Ms Politkovskaya, who was 48, was a fierce critic of Mr Putin, particularly over the conduct of the war in Chechnya. She catalogued abuses committed by Russian forces and by private militias loyal by Mr Kadyrov.

In a radio interview two days before she died, Ms Politkovskaya implicated a group controlled by Mr Kadyrov in killings. She said: “I am conducting an investigation about torture today in Kadyrov’s prisons. These are people who were abducted by Kadyrovsty for completely inexplicable reasons and who died.”

Her final article in Novaya Gazeta was incomplete but detailed evidence of torture on civilians by police in Chechnya, including stills from a video showing assaults on two unidentified victims. The published material did not link Mr Kadyrov directly to the allegations, however, and he has repeatedly denied any involvement in her death.