| Maksharip Aushev was Killed in Nalchik |
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| Written by smoc | |||
| Monday, 26 October 2009 08:14 | |||
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Maksharip Aushev, former opposition leader and former owner of dissident website Ingushetia.ru, was killed today morning in Nalchik, the capital of Kabardino-Balkaria Republic. “Some unknown armed people shot to Aushev’s car with automatic rifles in Nalchik, capital of Ingushetia’s neighbouring country Kabardino-Balkaria. After the attack, they ran away with their car. Maksharip Aushev died because he had wounded seriously with bullets” said Magomed Khazbiev, another well-known opposition leader of Ingushetia. He didn’t reported more information. Authorities from Kabardino-Balkaria have confirmed to the killing of Maksharip Aushev. “It occured today morning around at 9.30 Moscow times, near village Nartan Chegemskogo which is 10 km far away from Nazran. A woman passenger (his cousin) who was in the car with Maksharip Aushev, was injured and taken to the hospital” said a local authorithy.
Only a few days ago, we have published a new short documentary movie which name is “Russian’s Hidden War“, and reporter was describing to fear of Maksharip Aushev. Maksharip Aushev was born in February 16, 1966 in Surkhakhi village of Nazran. He graduated from Agriculture Institute in Vladikavkaz and worked as manager of various companies. Maksharip Aushev became owner of the dissident website Ingushetia.ru, after the murdering of the site’s founder, Magomed Yevloyev in August 2008. After Murat Zyazikov, President of Ingushetia was replaced in November 2008; Aushev relinquished the site, which then sided with the new president, Yunusbek Yevkurov. Maksharip Aushev was a member of the expert council of the office of Russia’s human rights ombudsman. Aushev was married and has five children. Photo screens of Aushev’s car after the attack:
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Disinformation, or the planting of false information to deceive or smear an enemy, is now being regularly used by both government and non-governmental players in Russia and Ukraine in the fierce battles for control of power and assets in these countries. During the January 2009 "gas war" between Ukraine and Russia, the Russian leadership accused Ukraine of preventing Russian gas from reaching customers in the E.U. The charges were shown to be blatantly false, but were repeated by Russian spokesmen in order to discredit Ukraine as a gas transit country, while building up support within Europe for the North Stream and South Stream pipeline projects. In what might have been a possible retaliation for this, Ukraine launched its own stealth campaign, claiming that the Russian consulate in the Crimea was handing out Russian passports to Russians living in the peninsula. Ukraine was never able to prove these charges, but the idea took hold and many Ukrainians seemed convinced that these "passports" were meant to stir up the Crimean population and were a prelude to the forcible separation of Crimea from Ukraine by Russian armed might. |
