 Shootouts
between insurgents and police and other violent incidents have been
reported across the North Caucasus this week, a week which also marked
the second anniversary of the proclamation of the Caucasus Emirate, the
notional Islamic state declared by the radical Islamist wing of the
North Caucasus rebel movement.
A car blew up in Nazran,
Ingushetia today, killing its driver. Investigators believe an
explosive device was attached to the bottom of the vehicle, although
they do not rule out that the bomb was in the passenger compartment.
The victim was identified as Mukhammed Bekov, who just three days ago
started a job as a driver for a private polyclinic and was driving the
company car at the time of the blast. Also today, Ilyas Dugov, press
secretary of the Ingush branch of the Federal Security Service (FSB),
announced that a rebel leader, Ruslan Bartykhoev, was killed in a
special operation in the village of Novy Redant. On October 7, three
members of Bartykhoev’s group, Adam Yevloev, Bekkhan Mamsurov and Artur
Murzabekov, were captured in Karabulak along with grenades and a
detonator made out of a cell phone. They are accused of planning
terrorist attacks in Ingushetia.
In addition, a suspected rebel
identified as Movsar Merzhoev was killed today in a special operation
in the village of Ordzhonikidzevskaya in Ingushetia’s Sunzha district.
Merzhoev reportedly opened fire on police who were attempting to detain
him, and was shot and killed by return fire (ITAR-TASS, October 9).
The
Associated Press today quoted Dagestan Interior Ministry spokesman Mark
Tolchinsky as saying that a bomb went off in a park in the town of
Derbent overnight, killing a man police believe had planned to use it
in an attack (AP, October 9).
Yesterday (October 8), a man
identified as the “emir” of the Makhachkala jamaat, Gadzhimurad
Kamalutdinov, was killed together with his wife during a special
operation in the village of Kirovaul in Dagestan’s Kizylurt district. A
Federal Security Service (FSB) said the couple opened fire on police
during a passport check at a private home in Kirovaul, after which FSB
spetsnaz surrounded the home and then stormed it. The source said an
automatic rifle, a pistol and a large quantity of ammunition were found
in the house. According to the FSB, Kamalutdinov was a nephew of the
“ideologue of the Dagestani extremists,” Bagautdin Magomedov, who has
been on the international wanted list since 1999, and headed a group
responsible for attacks on police and other terrorist crimes. Interfax
noted that Kamalutdinov had been reported killed during a special
operation in Makhachkala earlier this year (www.newsru.com, October 8).
On
October 4, FSB bomb disposal experts defused an explosive device
planted in a car parked outside three five-story apartment buildings in
Derbent (EDM, October 8). The car was discovered during a security
operation and a robot was used to open its trunk, which contained a
ten-liter can packed with aluminum powder and saltpeter ammonia along
with bolts and nails, as well as 15 kilos of saltpeter ammonia in
separate packs (ITAR-TASS, October 4).
On October 3,
unidentified gunmen shot and killed Murtazili Magomedov, a resident of
the village of Komsomolskoe in Dagestan’s Kizilyurt district described
as a well-known Muslim theologian, as he was driving on the Kavkaz
federal highway. Magomedov was reportedly returning from Makhachkala,
where he was visiting a sick relative.
The Kavkazsky Uzel
website quoted a Komsomolskoe resident as saying: “Murtazali was not
involved in anything; he did not have any enemies. His only assets
[were] Islamic sciences, which he taught to anyone who desired it.
Murtazali recently had small incidents with certain representatives of
the official clergy, who hung the label ‘Wahhabi’ on him”
(www.kavkaz-uzel.ru, October 4).
Three suspected militants were
reportedly killed near the village of Toturbiikal in Dagestan’s
Khasavyurt district on October 3 (RIA Novosti, October 3). That same
day, bomb disposal experts defused an explosive device discovered under
the Mozdok-Kazimagomed gas pipeline near the village of Bashlykent in
Dagestan’s Kayakent district. The device consisted of a 10-liter
zinc-covered bucket filled with ammonium nitrate and aluminum powder
with a detonator and timer set for 12:30 Moscow time. It was
deactivated at 10:10 Moscow time (ITAR-TASS, October 3).
Source: The Jamestown Foundation In
Chechnya, a senior lieutenant who was a commander of a Russian army
unit was wounded October 7 when unidentified gunmen fired on an
observation post near the settlement of Yandy in the Achkhoi-Martan
district. The gunfire came from a wooded area near the observation
post. Also on October 7, a suspected rebel was killed in a shootout
with police in a forest near the village of Duba-Yurt in Chechnya’s
Shali district (ITAR-TASS, October 8).
Kavkazsky Uzel reported
on October 4 that 173 people had been killed in the 170 days since the
Russian government announced an end to the counter-terrorist operation
regime launched in Chechnya in 1999. Out of the 173 killed, 16 were
civilians. Another 125 people were wounded and 29 were abducted.
According to the website, during those 170 days, at least 71 shootouts
between rebels and security forces took place in which at least 95
people identified by the authorities as rebels were killed. During that
same period, at least 62 law-enforcement officers were killed and at
least 117 were wounded (www.kavkaz-uzel.ru, October 4).
A
Russian interior ministry source said on October 7 that more than 2,000
rebels had been killed and nearly 6,300 captured in the Southern
Federal District since 2003, and that around 20 tons of explosives had
been seized during that same period. The source said around 750 rebels
have been killed or captured this year (www.kavkaz-uzel.ru, ITAR-TASS,
October 7).
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