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Police Capture Azerbaijani Suspected Of Moscow Murder

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  • Police Capture Azerbaijani Suspected Of Moscow Murder

    POLICE CAPTURE AZERBAIJANI SUSPECTED OF MOSCOW MURDER

    15 October 2013 Last updated at 14:20 GMT

    Yegor Shcherbakov was stabbed to death on Thursday

    Russian police have captured an Azerbaijani man suspected of murdering
    a young Russian, whose death led to riots targeting migrants in Moscow.

    Police backed by special forces detained Orkhan Zeynalov in Kolomna,
    120km (75 miles) from the Russian capital, the interior ministry said.

    Yegor Shcherbakov, 25, was stabbed in front of his girlfriend on
    Thursday.

    Ill-feeling has risen towards Moscow's Muslim migrants, thousands of
    whom gathered for street prayers on Tuesday.

    The tension came just as Russia was being commended for tackling
    racism.

    Some local residents voiced strong opinions against migrants in
    their communities

    "Substantial efforts have been made to react firmly to the escalation
    of racist violence in Russia, and there has been a decline in the
    number of racist attacks," according to a summary of the report by the
    Council of Europe (CoE), the continent's main human rights watchdog.

    The Council of Europe stressed that its report, released on Tuesday,
    was compiled in June, long before violence erupted in Moscow at
    the weekend.

    Muslims celebrated the Islamic feast of Eid al-Adha in Moscow on
    Tuesday.

    The sight of so many Muslim men praying in the road has caused unease
    among many Muscovites.

    While Muslims from Tatarstan and other parts of Russia have a long
    history in Moscow, their numbers have been swollen by non-Russian
    migrant workers in recent decades.

    Police stood by during the prayers but the mass gathering seems to
    have passed off peacefully.

    On Sunday, in response to Shcherbakov's murder, protesters shouting
    Russian nationalist slogans attacked businesses in Biryulyovo which
    employed migrant workers from the Caucasus and Central Asia.

    Riot police arrested hundreds of protesters while at least 1,200
    people were detained in a follow-up raid on suspected illegal migrants
    in Biryulyovo.

    District police chief Gennady Kaverin has been sacked. No details
    were given.

    An estimated 103,000 Muslims attended mass street prayers outside a
    mosque in Moscow on Tuesday to celebrate the Islamic feast of Eid
    al-Adha, police told Russian media. The prayers apparently passed
    off without incident.

    Such huge gatherings have become a tradition in recent years in a
    city with few mosques and a large, often transient, Muslim population.

    'Insult'

    Mr Zeylanov's arrest came just hours after police released his name
    and warned the public not to approach him on sight.

    No details of his detention were given other than that he was being
    brought back to Moscow by helicopter.

    Earlier, Moscow police chief Anatoly Yakunin said police had discussed
    the case by phone with their colleagues in Azerbaijan, a former
    Soviet republic in the southern Caucasus which has a visa-free travel
    agreement with Russia.

    Police were reportedly alerted to Mr Zeylanov as the suspect after
    his flatmates in Moscow recognised him from CCTV images released by
    the media.

    He is said to have worked for his uncle as a driver at a vegetable
    market. Eight of his relatives were arrested in Moscow as police
    mounted a search for the fugitive, who vanished on Monday night,
    the Russian tabloid Life News reports.

    Yegor Shcherbakov was buried on Saturday. He was stabbed after
    an altercation with his attacker, who had reportedly insulted his
    girlfriend, Ksenia Popova.

    Writing on social media, Ms Popova said neither she nor her late
    boyfriend's relatives supported the violent protests over his murder.

    Describing her grief after his funeral, she wrote: "Today I kissed
    you for the last time. Your lips were very cold...

    "How painful and terrible to see you in that dark coffin... You never
    did like suits..."

    Nationalism fears

    Some 380 people were detained during the rioting on Sunday, when
    protesters stormed a shopping centre, smashing windows, and then
    overran a wholesale vegetable market searching for migrant workers.

    Chants of "Russia for the Russians" and "White Power" could be heard.

    Most of those detained were released with a caution but around 70
    face court appearances for administrative offences and three have
    been charged with public disorder, Interfax reports.

    The BBC's Steve Rosenberg reports that the subsequent arrest of
    more than 1,200 migrant workers at the market shows how worried the
    authorities are.

    They clearly want to convince Muscovites they take the grievances of
    local residents seriously and will crack down hard on illegal migrant
    workers but dramatic police raids will do little to ease the tension
    that is growing in parts of the Russian capital between ethnic Russians
    and people from the Caucasus region and some former Soviet republics,
    our correspondent says.

    In its report, the CoE also expresses concern that radical nationalism
    is on the rise in Russia, and there is a high incidence of racist
    violence, directed predominantly against persons of "non-Slav
    appearance".

    Violations of migrants' basic rights occur "on a massive scale"
    in the country, it said.

    According to the Russian news website lenta.ru, about 10 million
    migrants, most of them from the poorest republics of the ex-USSR,
    are working illegally in Russia (population 143 million), with a
    further three million employed legally.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-24532768

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