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  • Chechens live in fear of reprisals

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Sept 15 2004

    Chechens live in fear of reprisals

    Anti-Caucasian discrimination hits new high in wake of Beslan, MARK
    MacKINNON reports

    By MARK MacKINNON


    MOSCOW -- The day after the siege ended at Beslan's Middle School No.
    1, terror came to the Khadayev home outside Moscow.

    Asya Khadayeva, 43, first spotted the car with the dark windows as
    she left for work at about 7:30 a.m. The car followed slowly as she
    and her daughter walked to the bus stop, and she was relieved when
    the bus picked them up and their pursuers didn't follow. An ethnic
    Chechen, she had been worried about revenge attacks on her family
    following the tragedy in Beslan.

    What she didn't know is that the men in the car were waiting for her
    to leave. After the bus pulled away, about 30 men burst through her
    home's doors and windows. Some wore masks and security-service
    uniforms, others carried grenades and automatic weapons.

    Her three teenaged children, who were still in the house, were forced
    to lie facedown on the floor with blankets over their heads. A gun
    was pressed against her 15-year-old son Magomed's skull. Her
    five-year-old daughter Amina was dragged from under her bed and
    forced to kneel beside her siblings at gunpoint while the home was
    searched.

    "She was screaming, 'Don't shoot me and don't kill my brothers,' "
    said Ms. Khadayeva, who moved to Moscow with her family four years
    ago to escape the war in Chechnya. "They wouldn't even let her older
    brothers comfort her."

    The children's father, Ramzan Khadayev, said the men identified
    themselves as members of various Russian security services, including
    the Federal Security Bureau.

    They were at the house for several hours, Ms. Khadayeva said. Some of
    the officers later drove to the food market where both parents and
    Ms. Khadayeva's brother work, and questioned all three.

    "One officer told us, 'You should leave [Moscow], it's not your
    home,' " she said. "I told them, 'Okay, give me back my apartment,
    which your soldiers destroyed, and the property that was stolen from
    me and I'll leave tomorrow,' " Ms. Khadayeva said. "They said that
    wasn't their problem. They told us we are Chechens so we are
    terrorists."

    Chechens have been persecuted and feared in Russia since the 19th
    century, when the armies of Czar Alexander II first tried to subdue
    the fierce people who live along the north end of the Caucasus
    mountain range. But the discrimination has hit new heights in recent
    years as dozens of acts of terrorism across Russia have been blamed
    on Chechens.

    The hatred grew again after the hostage-taking at Beslan, where more
    than 350 people were killed. Yesterday, Russian prosecutors charged a
    Chechen man identified as Nurpashi Kulayev in the deadly
    hostage-taking, the Interfax news agency reported.

    With a fresh wave of anti-Caucasian xenophobia sweeping the country,
    many Chechens say they now rarely leave their homes, fearful of even
    their neighbours.

    In Moscow, police have arrested dozens of Chechens in the past few
    days, including a group of 20 men yesterday who were renovating
    schools in the region. They were released later in the day. Last
    week, in the Ural mountain city of Yekaterinburg, gangs of youths
    armed with clubs, chains and Molotov cocktails attacked cafés owned
    by Armenians and Azeris, killing one person and hospitalizing two
    others.

    Human-rights activists say the police are among the worst offenders
    when it comes to anti-Caucasian racism.

    "They have orders from the authorities to check every Caucasian
    person, man or a woman. They treat every Caucasian as a potential
    terrorist," said Yuri Tabak of the Moscow Human Rights Bureau.

    The situation for Chechens and other Caucasians living in Moscow has
    become so dangerous that some say they've stopped going outside
    unless it's absolutely necessary.

    Fatima Dudayeva fled the ruins of Grozny to join her sister in Moscow
    a month ago, hoping to find work and "have some fun" in the big city
    after almost a decade of constant war. But her arrival coincided with
    a string of suicide bombings carried out by young Chechen women --
    two on passenger planes and another outside a Moscow metro station.

    Denied registration papers that would allow her to look for work or
    rent a place of her own, she stays with her cousin in a small
    apartment in the city and says she's gone further than the corner
    store only once in the past two weeks.

    During that single trip out, Ms. Dudayeva was stopped by a policeman
    who asked her to prove she wasn't wearing a suicide belt. She had to
    pay him a 500-ruble bribe (about $25) to avoid being taken into
    custody.

    "They look for a Chechen trace in everything that goes wrong," the
    dark-eyed 26-year-old said. "The next time something happens in
    Moscow, the next terror act, it will be better to go back to
    Chechnya, despite the war there, and stay for a while until things
    calm down here."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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