Thursday, June 07, 2007

ULTRANATIONALIST SKINHEADS RIOT IN STAVROPOL, RUSSIA


The St. Petersburg Times (Russia) is reporting fifty-one people were detained during an overnight protest in Stavropol in which 1000 young people took part in denouncing non-Russians and brawling with police. Most were skinheads and members of ultranationalist organizations such as the Movement to Stop Illegal Immigration. Ostensibly the protest was to denounce the killing of two students.

The slain students, Viktor Chadin and Pavel Blokhin, were stabbed to death Saturday night in what ultranationalists call an ethnic hate crime. The deaths came less than two weeks after an ethnic Chechen student, Gilani Atayev, was killed in a street brawl in the southern city.

But a prosecutor said ethnic hatred was not even being considered as a possible motive. “There is no basis for that,” Andrei Vlasov, prosecutor of the city’s Leninsky district, said by telephone.

Stavropol prosecutors said Thursday that they had detained a suspect in the weekend murder of the two students.

The suspect, who was not identified, was detained early Wednesday and fits the description given by witnesses of the man who stabbed the two ethnic Russian students to death Saturday, a prosecutor said, Interfax reported. The prosecutor did not elaborate. Police said the suspect has Slavic appearance "which denies the persistent rumours that the students were killed by extremist-minded highlanders, in revenge for the tragic murder a week ago of Chechen youngster Gilani Atayev, a student of the Stavropol Humanities Institute."

Gilani's uncle, Ibragim Gunoyev, is astonished by the revenge theory, when he believes the true culprits are OMON police officers. This version is also backed up by Gilani's friend Zaurbek, who was with him in the police car that evening. He talked about this to Radio Liberty:

"That evening we'd had a call from some Chechens we knew asking us to come and join a 'scrap' with the local skinheads. Earlier a Chechen had been beaten up, and then an Ingush also beat up a Russian in a one-to-one fight. The Russians went on the attack and we had to withdraw. When I looked back I saw that they were beating a Chechen. It was Gilani. He was being badly beaten, and two policemen, holding handcuffs, were watching. I ran up and tried to help him. I managed to get one of the attackers off Gilani, but after that somebody shot at me with a pistol," Zaurbek said.

"Then we were thrown into a small police jeep. Gilani lay on the bottom, then they threw a Dagestani in with him, and I was on the top. They put a Russian into the vehicle, and he started to beat up Gilani. Gilani was panting and gasping. I knocked on the door and shouted and asked them to open the door, take off his handcuffs and give him first aid. They refused and said that if he died it would be one less wailer of Allahu akbar! They drove the jeep around Stavropol for about an hour and then brought it back to where the incident had taken place. There they made us get into another vehicle. They hurled Gilani straight from the jeep face down on the asphalt. After about 40 minutes a doctor arrived, examined Gilani, and said he was dead," he added.

Zaurbek is convinced that if the policemen had not incited the youths, the clash would have ended without casualties. "The policemen were egging the locals on, saying things like 'Go on, there's more of you than there are of them. There's not enough of them. On you go.' If they hadn't incited them there would only have been a one-to-one fight, and then we'd have dispersed," Zaurbek concluded.

Itar Tass reports a Presidential envoy in the Southern Federal District Dmitry Kozak warned that those trying to incite ethnic tensions after the events in Stavropol would be held responsible.

"I want to warn all false politicians that the law bans these actions, the law persecutes those who fan ethnic strife; and we'll be doing it," Kozak told a news conference in Makhachkala on Wednesday.

The envoy refused to call the events in Stavropol "political extremism."

"It's rather madness by certain false politicians who are trying to make a name and earn political dividends," he said.

"Given the multi-ethnic composition of the Stavropol territory, it's not the local public or political movements that are fanning the situation, but those from outside, from Moscow in the first place. They've tried to use it, to heat up ethnic relations, making them hotter," the official said.

I think once before I printed an article from Radio Free Liberty, but it's pretty damn rare. This one however I am printing after checking a multitude of other sources to confirm what it says.

Russia: Ethnic Tensions Mounting In Restive Stavropol

June 7, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Tensions are high in the southern Russian city of Stavropol, where hundreds of locals are calling for the expulsion of ethnic Chechens and other non-Russians from the city.

Many residents in the town, which is populated primarily by Slavs, believe Chechens are responsible for the slaying of two Russian students, possibly in revenge for the fatal attack on a young Chechen man during ethnic skirmishes in late May.

Officials in Stavropol have claimed that student Gelani Atayev died as a result of injuries sustained during the May 24 clashes between Slavs and Caucasians.

Eyewitness Account

But Zaurbek Akhmadov, a fellow Chechen student, witnessed the circumstances surrounding Atayev's death.

He told RFE/RL's North Caucasus Service that skinheads were responsible for the vicious beating that ultimately killed Atayev. But they didn't act alone, he claimed, saying that OMON riot troops and local police, who had been called out when the clashes began, played a role as well.

"The police officers were standing right there when the three skinheads started beating up Gelani. They put handcuffs on him and handed him to [the skinheads]." -- Zaurbek Akhmadov

"They [the OMON] cheered on the [skinheads]," Akhmatov said. "They yelled, 'Kill the [Chechens!]' And the policemen cheered them on too, saying, "Come on! There's more of you and there are only a couple of them! Come on!'

"If they hadn't done that, everyone would have gone away calmly. The police officers were standing right there when the three skinheads started beating up Gelani. They put handcuffs on him and handed him to [the skinheads]. When I turned around and saw the three of them beating Gelani, I ran and threw one of the skinheads to the side. As soon as I went after the second one, they shot me," Akhmadov added. "The bullets went through both of my legs, and I fell on my knees. Then they kicked me in the face while I was lying on the ground. Then they threw us in a UAZ patrol jeep. They put Gelani in at the bottom. He was still breathing at that time."

Atayev's body showed indications he had been handcuffed (courtesy)Akhmadov said Atayev, who was unconscious, had been struck several times in the throat with a truncheon. As they were taken on a rambling drive through the city, Akhmadov says, Atayev's breathing became more and more labored.

"He was breathing, but he was wheezing. I called for help, and pounded on the window and door [of the jeep]. I asked for them to take off at least my handcuffs, so that I could help him. I asked them to bring a doctor. They answered, 'Don't worry. He won't be shouting 'Allah Akbar' anymore. There'll be one less of you,'" Akhmadov said.

"They drove us around the city in that jeep for an entire hour. Gelani was lying down below, because they had put us in a pile. They brought us back to the place where everything happened. They started to put us in another car. They hurled Gelani onto the ground, face first. Then they tried to stand him on his feet, but he just slid down. He died. Then they threw him back in the car."

RFE/RL has obtained a series of graphic photographs of Atayev's body that show obvious signs of injury to the throat and head. Marks on his wrists appear to show that his hands had been tied or restrained with handcuffs.

Suspicious Circumstances

At the police station, Akhmadov was told he would act as a witness. But after refusing an appointed lawyer, saying he preferred to hire his own, he learned that he was now under suspicion for attacking a police officer. It is, he said, what officials in Stavropol "usually do with Chechens."

Akhmadov was speaking on June 5, after being released from detention. He is the first -- and so far the only -- witness to speak about the case.

Gelani Atayev's father, Ruslan, had earlier told RFE/RL he didn't expect any witnesses to step forward, because they were all hiding from officials for fear of arrest or harassment.

"The murder was committed entirely by authorities, and this fact is indisputable," he said. "That is why investigations aren't being conducted."

A screenshot from amateur video shows riot police arriving on the scene in Stavropol on May 24 (RFE/RL)Atayev's death was just the start of the violence. Nine days later, on June 3, two ethnic Russian students, Dmitry Blakhin and Pavel Chadin, were stabbed to death in a nighttime attack.

Police, who say the attack was recorded on videotape, announced today they had detained a suspect in the case.

They had earlier released a sketch of one of the alleged assailants, who was Slavic in appearance.

Many locals, however, were unconvinced. They said the killings were the likely work of Chechens seeking revenge for Atayev's death.

Law-enforcement officers have repeatedly dismissed the vengeance claim. Stavropol Krai Governor Aleksandr Chernogorov vowed to personally oversee the investigation, and called on local officials to prevent "destructive forces" from "fanning interethnic discord."

His orders weren't enough to prevent hundreds of ethnic Russians from gathering on the evening of June 5 -- the day Blakhin and Chadin were buried -- to attend a so-called "Slav rally" to protest the killings.

One participant was recorded shouting, "We didn't [kill] enough of you in Chechnya" while another yelled "We'll make another Chechnya here. Glory to Russia!" Others were heard chanting "Glory to Russia! Glory to Russia! Russia! Russia!"

Many of the protesters were skinheads and members of ultranationalist groups such as the Movement to Stop Illegal Immigration, a group whose stated goals include nationwide expulsion of non-Russians.

Police eventually rounded up 51 protesters. Two remained in detention the following day.

Police Roundup

The spokesperson for the regional Interior Ministry directorate, Viktor Ignatyev, said the police had brought in protesters who appeared to be violent or otherwise disruptive.

"Fifty-one people, including eight minors, were not detained, but delivered to the Leninsky district department of internal affairs (ROVD) for investigation," Ignatyev said. "We followed administrative protocol. In relation to one other citizen, a criminal case has been opened according to the article on 'Inciting hatred or enmity or denigration of human dignity.' The group disrupted public order -- they were shouting out slogans. It took some physical force to round them up; some of them were handcuffed. It wasn't anything terrible."
The year 2006 saw 540 recorded cases of violent hate crimes throughout Russia, including 54 slayings.

Stavropol Krai, a region in the North Caucasus predominantly populated by Slavs, has long been considered a potential powder keg as ethnic and religious discrimination rises throughout Russia.

The recent unrest in Stavropol is reminiscent of riots in the northwestern Russian town of Kondopoga in 2006, in which local Slavs and ethnic Chechens working in the area staged violent clashes.

The year 2006 saw 540 recorded cases of violent hate crimes throughout Russia, including 54 slayings.

Rizvan is an ethnic Chechen who has lived in Stavropol all his life and says he doesn't intend to leave now.

"There have been attacks on Caucasians here before. Some time ago, a Karachayev was killed after suffering knife wounds," Rizvan said. "Here and there Chechens and Karachayevs and representatives of other ethnic groups were beaten up. Usually this happens when there are a lot of [attackers], and they're sure that a potential victim can't stand in their way. What happened is 100 percent a provocation that was probably planned in advance."

Officials from Russia's Southern Federal District, which includes Stavropol Krai, in April called together a conference of regional experts to discuss the issue of interethnic tensions.

Their reported conclusion was grim: relations between the territory's ethnic and religious communities are tense and may grow even worse during the next two years.

(RFE/RL's correspondent in Stavropol, Lada Ledeneva, contributed to this report.)

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