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Caucasus
Russia Cites Rift Between Chechen Rebels
2004-09-12
The deadly Chechen militant attack on a school in southern Russia has produced a split in the rebel cause, Russian officials claimed on Saturday.
Probably a temporary thing, but it does suggest there might be some humanity remaining on the Chechen side...
In what was an apparent attempt to exploit the division, Russia announced earlier this week that it would pay $10 million for information leading to the arrest of the top Chechen rebel leaders, Shamil Basayev and Aslan Maskhadov. Federal Security Service Maj.-Gen. Ilya Shabalkin underlined on Saturday that rebels were eligible for the reward.

Officials say Chechens were among the 11 attackers who have been identified, and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Friday the hostage-taking was directed by Basayev — the most notorious of the warlords leading Chechen rebels who have been fighting Russian forces for five years. Lavrov said Maskhadov, Chechnya's president from 1996-99, also was linked to the hostage-taking. The clarification about the reward by Shabalkin, a spokesman for the Russian forces' Chechnya operations, appeared to be aimed at aimed at exploiting reported dissension in the fighters' ranks over taking over at the school in the Northern Ossetian city of Beslan. The hostage-taking ended Sept. 3 in a frenzy of shooting and explosions and the deaths of at least 330 people. Subsequent news accounts said former hostages claimed some rebels argued with their leader once they found out they were to take children hostages. Some accounts said the raiders' leader shot one of the dissidents and then detonated by remote control the suicide bomb belts worn by two women raiders.
Made their day ...
"Information coming from various channels to law-enforcement organs shows that after the commission of the terrorist act in Beslan there is a tense situation and atmosphere of conflict between the fighters," Shabalkin's office said in a statement. The Federal Security Service "is prepared to cooperate with anybody, among them members of illegal armed formations without harming their personal security or restricting their right to the monetary reward," the statement said. Russia previously had offered amnesty to rebels who laid down arms. It was not immediately clear if Shabalkin's statement about personal security meant that rebels could receive the reward without renouncing their violent cause.
That'd be a bright move on their part, wouldn't it? Turn in the boss, then go back to work, only prosperous?
Akhmed Zakayev, an envoy for the former Chechnya president Maskhadov, was quoted in the German magazine Der Spiegel on Saturday as saying both he and Maskhadov had offered to negotiate during the crisis and that Maskhadov's followers had no connection with the warlord Basayev. "This act has caused greater damage (to the Chechen separatist cause) than 10 years of the darkest anti-Chechen propaganda," Zakayev was quoted as saying.
Who needs propaganda when your minions indulge in the lowest possible form of brutality imaginable? But it'll wear off, don't worry. Remember when the Paleos tossed an old guy in a wheelchair overboard? That was before Yasser got his Nobel prize...
Also Saturday, the newspaper Gazeta reported that the leader of the band of hostage-takers was believed to be Ruslan Khuchbarov, from the neighboring province of Ingushetia. It said he was not among the dead. But deputy prosecutor-general Vladimir Kolesnikov said attack leader, whom he did not name, was among the dead. "He has received what he deserved and is in a refrigerator now," Kolesnikov was quoted by news agencies as saying.
Posted by:Fred

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