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Chechen Leader Urges Youth Not To Fight In Syrian Conflict

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  • Chechen Leader Urges Youth Not To Fight In Syrian Conflict

    CHECHEN LEADER URGES YOUTH NOT TO FIGHT IN SYRIAN CONFLICT

    Chechen Leader Ramzan Kadyrov Urges Youth Not to Fight in Syrian Conflict

    RIA Novosti. Said Tsarnaev
    13:11 18/06/2013
    http://en.rian.ru/politics/20130618/181728820/Chechen-Leader-Urges-Youth-Not-to-Fight-in-Syrian-Conflict.html

    MOSCOW, June 18 (RIA Novosti) - Chechnya's Kremlin-backed leader has
    launched an education campaign to persuade local youth not to take
    part in the Syrian conflict, he said in an interview published in
    Russian media on Saturday.

    Ramzan Kadyrov, a one-time separatist-turned Kremlin loyalist, told
    Russian media he has ordered Chechen officials, clerics and public
    figures to "constantly educate the youth about the real nature of
    Syrian events, to prevent possible recruitment of young people for
    participation in the war."

    He said his government is also "educating" young Chechens about the
    role of "external forces" in Syria's civil war, which has already
    claimed more than 93,000 lives according to the latest UN figures.

    Kadyrov said "five or six" Chechens have already been killed in the
    conflict, but did not elaborate.

    He admitted several more Chechens remain among the predominantly
    Sunni insurgents fighting Assad's regime, which mostly consist of
    Alawites, a Shia sect which has dominated the religiously diverse
    Middle Eastern nation.

    Kadyrov insisted that the Syrian war is not about jihad.

    "There is no holy war in Syria," he said, according to a transcript
    of his interview published on his government's website. "There is
    a campaign - well-planned by external forces - to topple (Assad's)
    regime, destroy the country, eliminate its military."

    His comments echo Russian President Vladimir Putin's stance on the
    conflict. Moscow remains Assad's biggest political ally and continues
    to supply weapons to his military. Putin has repeatedly criticized
    the West for supporting the enemies of what he describes as Syria's
    "legitimate" government.

    The pugnacious, bearded Kadyrov has plenty of experience in opposing
    Islamist militants in his own republic.

    A teenage boxing enthusiast, he joined anti-Kremlin Chechen separatists
    in the mid-1990s along with his father Akhmad, a prominent cleric
    with one of the powerful Sufi brotherhoods that have traditionally
    held sway in Chechnya.

    But after their clan fell out with other insurgents inspired by
    the radical Wahhabist ideology, the elder Kadyrov headed Chechnya's
    pro-Kremlin government in the early 2000s and was instrumental in
    largely putting down the rebel movement there. He was later killed
    in a bomb attack.

    Human rights groups and critics have long accused Ramzan Kadyrov and
    his local forces of abductions, extrajudicial killings, torture and
    other grave human rights abuses. But the Kremlin has credited him
    with restoring peace in the war-ravaged province and returning tens
    of thousands of refugees to Chechnya.

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