Terror in Chechnya: Russia and the Tragedy of Civilians in War

Terror in Chechnya: Russia and the Tragedy of Civilians in War

by Emma Gilligan
Terror in Chechnya: Russia and the Tragedy of Civilians in War

Terror in Chechnya: Russia and the Tragedy of Civilians in War

by Emma Gilligan

Paperback

$25.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

A riveting history of Russia's crimes in Chechnya

Terror in Chechnya is the definitive account of Russian war crimes in Chechnya. Emma Gilligan provides a comprehensive history of the second Chechen conflict of 1999 to 2005, revealing one of the most appalling human rights catastrophes of the modern era—one that has yet to be fully acknowledged by the international community. Drawing upon eyewitness testimony and interviews with refugees and key political and humanitarian figures, Gilligan tells for the first time the full story of the Russian military's systematic use of torture, disappearances, executions, and other punitive tactics against the Chechen population.

In Terror in Chechnya, Gilligan challenges Russian claims that civilian casualties in Chechnya were an unavoidable consequence of civil war. She argues that racism and nationalism were substantial factors in Russia's second war against the Chechens and the resulting refugee crisis. She does not ignore the war crimes committed by Chechen separatists and pro-Moscow forces. Gilligan traces the radicalization of Chechen fighters and sheds light on the Dubrovka and Beslan hostage crises, demonstrating how they undermined the separatist movement and in turn contributed to racial hatred against Chechens in Moscow.

A haunting testament of modern-day crimes against humanity, Terror in Chechnya also looks at the international response to the conflict, focusing on Europe's humanitarian and human rights efforts inside Chechnya.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691162041
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2013
Series: Human Rights and Crimes against Humanity , #21
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Emma Gilligan is assistant professor of Russian history and human rights at the University of Connecticut. She is the author of Defending Human Rights in Russia: Sergei Kovalyov, Dissident and Human Rights Commissioner, 1969-2003.

Read an Excerpt

TERROR IN CHECHNYA

RUSSIA AND THE TRAGEDY OF CIVILIANS IN WAR
By EMMA GILLIGAN

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

Copyright © 2010 Princeton University Press
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-691-13079-8


Chapter One

THE BOMBING, 1999-2000

You can see what a mess Russia is in. They can't bring any order to us. The only thing they bring is war, and I think the fight will last a long time. -Chechen civilian, January 2000

I don't know why the sun comes back here, to a city used to the dark, to a people used to pain. Every night when darkness sets traps in the broken windows of the houses (like the toothless smile of an old woman) I solemnly swear that if the morning returns, I will leave this city forever. -Mainat Abdulaeva, in Novaia Gazeta, September 2002

The Prelude to War

Chechnya was a failing state in the interim period between the first Chechen war (1994-96) and the beginning of the subsequent conflict in September 1999. When Russia's armed forces entered the small republic for a second time that autumn, they were penetrating a politically fractured and economically deprived region, struggling to overcome its isolation. While the Chechen separatist movement had, for all intents and purposes, won the first Chechen war and elected a new president, Aslan Maskhadov, the question of Chechnya's status within the Russian Federation was still unresolved. The Khasaviurt Peace Treaty signed by Lieutenant General Alexander Lebed and Maskhadov in Dagestan on August 31, 1996, postponed discussion of this vital issue until 2001. The morass into which the country fell was a tragedy that had resounding consequences.

The new Chechen state of Ickheria struggled for a number of reasons. First, the radical wing of the newly formed separatist government-a faction led by Shamil Basaev, Movladi Udugov, and the ideologist Zelimkhan Yandarbiev-encouraged the adoption of an Islamic front that sought to repackage the political identity of the Chechen state and radicalize dissonant and disenfranchised groups. These groups and their private armies undermined President Maskhadov's call for a centralized and democratic order. Second, intra-clan (teip) rivalries diminished the effectiveness of the law enforcement agencies, whose officers were expected to respond to crime, regardless of teip allegiances, but who were in many cases frightened of the consequences if they did so. Finally, little international support was provided for the building of bureaucratic and administrative structures capable of providing care and ser vices to the population under the guidance of appropriate specialists. Unlike the significant levels of attention and financial support devoted to Kosovo under the UN protectorate of June 1999, Chechnya was given neither. This was a country, despite its fragile victory, that had suffered a traumatic three years of brutal war. Recovering from this tragedy was a process that required time and support, fiscal as well as psychological. Chechnya was deprived of both.

The roots of Russian violence and Chechen retaliation in the post-Soviet era, however, should first be sought in two key moments: the political turbulence of the period from 1990 to 1994 and the patterns of violent coercion established during the 1994-96 Russo-Chechen war. The emergence of the Chechen separatist movement grew out of the "Popular Fronts" characteristic of the perestroika period. Led by the Vanaikh Democratic Party under Zelimkhan Yandarbiev, the so-called Chechen Revolution that followed in the wake of the "Velvet" Revolution in the Czech Republic in 1989 and the reassertion of independence claims in the Baltic Republics was marked by the first Chechen National Congress (CNC) and a "Declaration of State Sovereignty" in November 1990. Chechnya's claim for independence was not uncharacteristic of the period. This call for self-determination was supported by Boris Yeltsin on the wave of his victory over former president Gorbachev in the lead-up to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

That support was short-lived. Internal problems in Chechnya soon grew evident. The Soviet air force major-general Dzhokhar Dudaev was elected chairman of the Executive Committee of the National Congress in 1991. And despite being a charismatic leader, capable of rousing nationalist sentiment, Dudaev soon displayed some problematic character traits. He dissolved the Chechen-Ingush Supreme Soviet under Doku Zavgaev and replaced it with a provisional government led by the Executive Committee of the CNC. He depended greatly on shady opportunists like Beslan Gantemirov and Ruslan Labazanov to provide financial and military support. And after his election as president, he formally declared Chechen independence on November 1, 1991.2 Far from deferential, Dudaev quickly formed a National Armed Guard as the Russian government similarly armed its Chechen proxies. The Chechen president began withholding the payment of federal taxes, and thousands of ethnic Russians were forced to leave as a result of personal threats or blatant attacks on their apartments, or in response to the rapidly failing state sector. In asserting control over both the Baku-Novorississk pipeline and the main train route from Russia to Dagestan and Azerbaijan, Dudaev managed to make his intentions clear.

Despite the Chechen president's autocratic tendencies, the evidence strongly suggests that Dudaev's ultimate aim was a constitutional secular state for Chechnya. The Chechen constitution approved in 1992 was a secular document with none of the Islamic references to Shariah law that would later dominate the political landscape or its attendant iconography. His stubbornness in this fragile period from 1990 to 1994, however, proved to be a major contributing factor to the tragic events that followed. He categorically rejected a draft treaty on autonomy on the model proposed for Tartastan and insisted that all negotiations be conducted at the executive level with Yeltsin personally. On the Russian side, President Yeltsin imposed a cordon sanitaire, hoping to isolate the region economically and force the nationalist movement into submission. This policy was ruinous for the state sector. The Russian government, moreover, wavered dramatically between conciliatory gestures and bouts of arrogance in a negotiation process that could only be characterized as fatal to the future of Chechen life. The reasons were linked, in part, to the rapidly changing political circumstances taking place in the Russian Federation after the 1993 state Duma elections and the personal hubris of both presidents. But no substantial negotiations ever took place. No meetings were ever convened between the respective presidents and both sides proved incapable of framing a set of negotiations capable of averting a crisis. By 1994, with the threat of an imminent attack, however, Dudaev did appeal to President Yeltsin on numerous occasions by telephone, letter, and through media interviews calling for negotiations and apparently proposed in a meeting with Defense Minister Pavel Grachev that he was prepared to discuss a Tartastan variant. His attempts were allegedly shunned.

On November 26, 1994, unmarked Russian tanks advanced to the center of the Chechen capital in the direction of the presidential palace. The Russian tank crews were attacked by forces loyal to Dudaev; some were taken prisoner while others were forced to retreat. This set the tone for the following eighteen months. The troops had been hastily gathered together into untrained units. Photographs of eighteen-and nineteen-year-old boys with helmets askew and bewilderment in their eyes covered the front pages of Moscow's major newspapers. The first war in Chechnya could easily be depicted as a series of bungled errors, if it were not for the catastrophic consequences it produced. By the time of the full-scale bombing campaign against Grozny over the winter of 1994, a fondness for "ultimatums" was clear. And the decision makers in Moscow clearly understood each other. Characteristic leaflets air-dropped by the Russian armed forces on local villages threatened: "If there is open fire from your village, we will retaliate without hesitation with powerful missile strikes!" Indiscriminate strikes became the preferred mode of warfare against a ground war the Russian armed forces were unfit to win. Civilians recall being unprepared, shocked by the indiscriminate bombing and the lack of warning to ensure safe evacuation. Thousands of people abandoned the city, but thousands, especially elderly Russians and Chechens, were stranded in Grozny either with no relatives to help them move or too impoverished to move themselves. Many left for the mountains of Southern Chechnya or for the neighboring republics of Ingushetia and Dagestan.

It is all too easy to reduce our memory of the first Chechen war to the incompetence of the Russian armed forces and the final victory of the separatists. Yet the first Chechen war was instrumental in establishing the patterns of violence that were later refined beginning in September 1999. In the aftermath of the indiscriminate airpower that struck Grozny over the winter of 1994, two actualities entered Chechen life. One was random detainment and the filtration point. The other was torture. Both features were soon tragically embedded into the routines of everyday life in the region. And while massive sweep operations were not of the scale later witnessed, the massacre of 103 civilians in the village of Samashki on April 7 and 8, 1995, was symptomatic of Russian privilege and immunity from criminal prosecution. Events like this, which spoke to the brutality of the Russian forces, gave Chechens valid reason not merely to fear the Russian troops but to justify the hatred that accompanied that fear. It only added to the growing sense that the new Yeltsin presidency was something alien and oppressive. As one civilian recalled, "Leaving the village for the hospital in Grozny, I passed a Russian armored personnel carrier with the word SAMASHKI written on its side in bold, black letters. I looked in my rearview mirror and to my horror saw a human skull mounted on the front of the vehicle. The bones were white; someone must have boiled the skull to remove the flesh."

Chechen forces under Shamil Basaev and Salman Raduev responded to Samashki with hostage-taking campaigns in Budennovsk and Kizliar illustrating the brutal tactics that they too were prepared to utilize. Yet Chechen men were fighting for disparate reasons in the first Chechen war; some were driven by a strong nationalist sentiment, others were responding to the bombing of Grozny, and many were fighting for the protection of their families and properties. It was this combination of motives that so enhanced the resolve of Chechen troops and explains the national unity that accompanied this first war. Fighting on their own terrain, with a high level of morale, they proved more astute at ground warfare than their Russian counterparts. They deployed strategies quintessential to guerilla warfare-spontaneous ambushes, sniper fire, and the destruction of Russian armored vehicles.

Indeed, it was the surprise assault on the Russian garrison in Grozny, led by Aslan Maskhadov, that finally convinced the Russian government to begin negotiations in August 1996. Other vital factors were the forthcoming presidential elections and the death of President Dudaev on April 21, 1996. Despite the signing of the Khasaviurt Peace Treaty that summer, it is doubtful whether the Russian government ever truly intended to grant Chechnya its independence. But the Chechens saw it as their victory and responded by organizing presidential elections. The Russian blockade continued into the postwar period. And attendant economic, social, and political problems grew as a result, because of both the Russian blockade and the failure of President Maskhadov's government to establish a successful state administration. While de facto independence may have fed a national desire in Chechnya, the new government struggled to control the social changes unleashed by the war.

The hostage trade was a phenomenon that grew steadily in response to the burdens of the postwar period. And the kidnaping of locals and foreigners alike by Chechen criminal groups provoked legitimate alarm. The hostage trade expanded for a number of reasons. It was clearly an extension of the practices that had defined the exchange of prisoners of war from 1994 to 1996. Given that the 1949 Geneva Conventions were never applied to the first Chechen war, there were no rules regulating the exchange of POWs. An in de pen dent economy, run by intermediaries, grew up around the exchange of Russian prisoners for Chechen prisoners, and vice versa. And the practice was merely criminalized in the interwar period. Criminal groups began to adopt the practice of taking hostages and demanding larger ransom payments for abducted civilians or foreigners. The hostage trade was then consolidated by an unemployment rate that stood at around 70 percent in 1998-creating a disenfranchised sector with little to do and little money to spend. And, finally, the middle-ranking commanders from the first Chechen war, unable to find a place in the new government or to face the demands of civilian life, established private armies that merely fractured already delicate political allegiances.

By 1999 the official number of those kidnaped stood at 560. The majority of foreign hostages detained in the years 1997-99 were released in exchange for ransoms. Among the hundreds seized was the Italian photographer Mauro Galligani, of Panorama, who was taken in February 1997 and was the first foreign journalist to be kidnaped. Three journalists from Radio Rossii and one from ITAR-TASS were taken in March, and Yelena Masyuk and her crew from the Russian television station NTV were seized in May. Humanitarian agencies like Médecins Sans Frontières, Campaign against Hunger, INTERSOS, and Equilibre were all targeted. Camilla Carr and Jonathan James, who had helped set up a rehabilitation center for traumatized children, were held for fourteen months. Vincent Cochetel, the head of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the Northern Caucasus, was held for eleven months. The American missionary Herbert Gregg was filmed while his captors cut off his right index finger in an effort to hasten a ransom payment. Other aid workers, from Hungary, Poland, Sweden, and Switzerland, were also captured and freed. The Russian general Gennadii Shpigun and four employees of British Granger Telecom and British Telecom never emerged alive. On October 9, 1998, in what may have been the result of territorial rivalries between hostage-taking groups, Darren Hickey, Peter Kennedy, Rudi Petschi, and Stan Shaw were executed and their heads placed on the side of the road near the village of Assinovskaia, Achkoi-Martanovskii district, in a gruesome display of hauteur.

External factors undoubtedly contributed to the radicalization of Chechen society in the interwar period. Exactly how many radical fundamentalists arrived in Chechnya at this time is unknown. One training camp, the Caucasian Center of the Islamic Mission, which was located near the village of Serzhen-Iurt in the Shali district, was directed by the Saudi-born Abu Ibn Al-Khattab and supported the austere form of Islam known as Wahhabism. In his memoir, the Chechen surgeon Khassan Baiev recalls that the Wahhabis came to the region claiming that "our Chechen traditions contradicted the Koran.... I had been told that the Wahhabis offered young men what we considered large sums of money-from 100 to 200 a month-to join their movement, which distressed the elders, who ordered the Wahhabis out of the villages."

(Continues...)



Excerpted from TERROR IN CHECHNYA by EMMA GILLIGAN Copyright © 2010 by Princeton University Press. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix

Ac know ledg ments xi

Introduction 1

PART ONE: THE CRIMES

CHAPTER 1: THE BOMBING, 1999? 2000 23

The Prelude to War 23

The Assault on Chechnya 32

CHAPTER 2: THE ZACHISTKA, 2000? 2002 50

The Massacre at Novye Aldy 54

Torture at Chernokozovo 58

Temporary Filtration Points 62

CHAPTER 3: THE DISAPPEARANCES, 2002? 5 77

Th e Early Cases 78

Chechenization 83

Summary Executions and Mass Graves 91

CHAPTER 4: FINDING REFUGE 98

Evacuation Routes 99

The Humanitarian Response and Forced Migrant Status 103

Forced Evictions and the Politics of Normalization 110

Asylum in Eu rope 118

PART TWO: THE RESPONSE

CHAPTER 5: CHECHEN RETALIATION 123

Budennovsk and Kizliar 127

Dubrovka and Operation Boomerang 130

Beslan 138

CHAPTER 6: CIVIL SOCIETY REACTS 144

The Journalists: Babitskii, Politkovskaia,

Abdulaeva, and Aliev 146

The Moscow Human Rights Community 157

Local Chechen Re sis tance 161

CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL FAILURE 165

The UN Commission on Human Rights 166

The Council of Europe 168

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) 174

The United States and the War on Terror 177

A War Crimes Tribunal for Chechnya 179

CHAPTER 8: SEEKING JUSTICE IN EU ROPE: CHECHENS AT THE EUROPE AN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS 183

NGO Justice 186

Human Rights Case I: Isaeva, Iusupova and Bazaeva v. Russia 188

Human Rights Cases II and III: Bazorkina v. Russia and Luluev v. Russia 192

Human Rights Case IV: Chitaev and Chitaev v. Rus sia 197

Public Hearings 199

CONCLUSION 204

Notes 213

Bibliography 241

Index 265

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This book constitutes a major step forward in the study of war crimes and human rights violations during the second Russo-Chechen war. In Gilligan's view, the principal objective of the Russian leadership was the subjugation and punishment of the Chechen populace. Her book is unprecedented in scope. Henceforth, those interested in this subject will turn first to this volume as a treasure trove of information."—John B. Dunlop, author of Russia Confronts Chechnya

"This is an important study of the human rights disaster that befell the people of Chechnya in the wake of renewed warfare between Russian armed forces and the breakaway republic in 1999. Terror in Chechnya, is a valuable contribution to our understanding of a long-neglected human rights tragedy."—Matthew Evangelista, author of The Chechen Wars

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews