Salman Raduyev

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Salman Raduyev
(Russian: Салма́н Раду́ев)
1967 - 2002
Nickname Lone Wolf (nom de guerre)
Michael Jackson, Titanic (nicknames)
Place of birth Novogroznensky, Chechnya
Place of death Solikamsk, Russia
Allegiance ChRI armed forces (1992-1997)
General Dudayev's Army (1997-2000)
Rank Brigadier General (1995-1997)
Unit 6th Brigade (Gudermessky District)
Battles/wars First Chechen War (Kizlyar raid)
Second Chechen War

Salman Raduyev (or Raduev; Russian: Салма́н Раду́ев; February 13, 1967December 14, 2002) was a Chechen separatist commander and freedom fighter,[1][2][3][4] widely considered to be one of the most radical and notorious Chechen rebel commanders of the period between 1994 and 1999. Arrested in 2000, he died in a Russian penal colony in mysterious circumstances.

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[edit] Early life

Raduyev was born in 1967 into the Gordaloy teip (clan) in Novogroznensky near Gudermes in eastern Chechnya. During the early 1980s Raduyev was active in the Komsomol (Young Communist League) of which he eventually became a leader for the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.[5] After attending high school in Gudermes, Raduyev served 1985-1987 in the Red Army as a construction engineer in the Strategic Rocket Forces unit stationed in the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, where he became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[6] After demobilization, he studied economy and worked in Soviet construction industry.

After Chechnya declared independence, he was appointed the prefect of Gudermes in June of 1992 by his father-in-law, Dzhokhar Dudayev, who was the President of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria.[5] He also married the daughter of Dudayev's cousin.

[edit] Field commander

During the First Chechen War Raduyev became a field commander for the separatist Chechen forces, then nicknamed "Lone Wolf".[5] He fought in the battle of Grozny and was wounded in March 1995 during an attempt to capture him by the Russian special forces. In October 1995, he became was one of the most important of the Chechen field commanders, commanding the 6th Brigade based in the strategically important Gudermessky District and responsible for the Gudermessky, part of the capital Grozny and the town of Argun. On December 14, 1995, Raduyev, along with Sultan Geliskhanov, led the raid on the city of Gudermes.

On January 9, 1996, Raduyev (allegedly copying Shamil Basayev's 1995 Budyonnovsk attack) led a large-scale Kizlyar hostage taking raid into neighbouring Russian region of Dagestan, where his men took at least 2,000 civilian hostages. The raid, which made Raduyev world-famous, escalated into the all-out battle and ended with the complete destruction of the border village of Pervomayskoye, and other Chechen leaders criticised Raduyev.[7] In March 1996, he was shot in the head and incorrectly reported dead.[8] (Russian special forces claimed to have killed him in revenge for the Kizlyar attack[5] while the other sources said he was shot in a Chechen feud.) In fact, Raduyev just disappeared as he went for medical treatment abroad.

[edit] Warlord

In the summer of 1996, Raduyev returned to the republic and refused the orders of the Chechnya's Acting President Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev to stop carrying out terrorist operations (he claimed ordering bombings of trolleybuses in Moscow[9] and train stations Armavir and Pyatigorsk), despite the ceasefire and talks that would lead up to the Khasav-Yurt Accord. He even accused Yandarbiyev of treason for agreeing to ceasfire and threatened to attack him.[10] Raduyev, his face deformed by injury and now hidden behind bushy red beard and black sunglasses, was the only field commander to announce openly that the "war without rules" with Russia would continue even despite the signing of a peace agreement.

In 1997, the newly elected Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov reduced Raduyev from the rank of Brigadier General to Private. However, further action was blocked by a public opposition from a Raduyev-led war veterans, including a prelonged rally in Grozny, which ended in a shootout resulting in the deaths of the commander of Raduyev's forces Vakha Dzhafarov and the Chechen security forces director Lechi Khultygov.[11] Meanwhile, Raduyev kept claiming responsibility for every explosion in Russia, including gas leaks. He claimed that Dudayev, who died in 1996, was still alive,[10] and now issuing orders to him from "a secret NATO base in Turkey" with the goal of the "liberation" of entire North Caucasus. Raduyev's eccentric behaviour was not widely popular in Chechnya.[12] Many openly doubted his sanity;[13] in the newspaper interview in 1997, Maskhadov described Raduyev as "mentally ill"[14] (even Basayev, Raduyev's ally in the opposition against Maskhadov,[15] reportedly called him "crazy"). In October 1997, Raduyev was again heavily wounded by a car bomb which killed three other people. Previously, he survived at least two other assassination attempts, in April and in July of 1997.

In May 1998, the Chechnya's Islamic court sentenced Raduyev in absence to four years in prison for allegedly attempting to overthrow Maskhadov,[16] but made no attempt to arrest him.[17] In September 1998, Raduyev announced a "temporary moratorium" on acts of terrorism.[18] As a sign of his good gesture towards Russia, Raduyev claimed that it was he who freed the nine kidnapped Russian servicemen from their captors.[19] He also became conflicted with the Islamist circles and called to ban "Wahhabism" in Chechnya.[20] In January of 1999, he backed the republic's parliament in its conflict with the Sharia Court.[21] His private militia, some 1,000-strong and called General Dudayev's Army,[5] was reportedly involved in several train robberies.[22]

In early 1999, Raduyev vanished from public again to underwent a major plastic surgery in Germany, in effect acquiring a new face. The alleged implants of titanium earned him the nickname of "Titanic" in Russia, while in Chechnya he became popularly known as "Michael Jackson".[14] Still seriously ill and recovering from surgery, Raduyev had vowed "reprisals" against Russia for the March 1999 sentencing of two Chechen women.[23] In September 1999, at the start of the Second Chechen War, Raduyev organized a rally in Grozny attended by 12,000 people where he urged residents to stay home and prepare to defend the city.[24] His group was reported to be virtually destroyed in a series of serious setbacks during the early fighting in the late 1999. Himself, he stopped talking about new terrorist attacks that he was going to organize.[6]

[edit] Arrest and trial

Raduyev was captured in March 2000 by Russian special operations unit Vympel in his home in Novogroznensky; soon after his arrest he was shown on television clean shaven, after Russian guards had forcefully shaven his beard. The Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Raduyev had confessed to trying to assassinate Eduard Shevardnadze, the President of Georgia.[25]

Raduyev was tried on 18 different charges (including terrorism, banditry, hostage-taking, organization of murders and organization of illegal armed formations).[17] He pleaded not guilty,[26] maintained he was only following orders,[27] claimed to suffer from no mental disorders whatsoever and said he hopes to be released from prison in some 10-12 years.[28] Dozens of witnesses were called to testify, but many of the alleged victims of his actions had refused to participate.[17] In December 2001, he was sentenced to life in prison.[29] His appeal was rejected by the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation in April 2002.

[edit] Death

In December 2002, Raduyev died in the "White Swan" penal colony in Solikamsk from internal bleeding.[30] The Russian authorities said he was not beaten to death,[31] but died due to a "serious and protracted diseases".[32] Raduyev's body was not returned to his family because of a newly-introduced Russian law barring the release of bodies of people convicted (or accused) of terrorism.

The circumstances surrounding the death of Raduyev are not clear and according to his family and the separatists he was murdered in prison after he refused to speak with the accusations against Akhmed Zakayev, then arrested in Denmark.[33] Kommersant daily said that "the real reason for Raduev's death will probably never be known," while Vremya Novostei suggested that, after being forced to give all the information requested from him, he was therefore "no longer needed" by the Russian authorities and killed.[34] Amnesty International has called for a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding his death[35] but the request was ignored and his body not exhumed.[32]

Salman Raduyev was survived by his wife and two sons – Dzhokhar and Salman, living abroad.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Laqueur, Walter (2004). Voices Of Terror: Manifestos, Writings, and Manuals of Al Qaeda, Hamas, and Other Terrorists from Around the World and Throughout the Ages. Reed Press, 492. ISBN 1594290350. 
  2. ^ Orttung, Robert W.; Danielle N. Lussier , Anna Paretskaya (2000). The Republics and Regions of the Russian Federation: A Guide to Politics. M.E. Sharpe, 630. ISBN 0765605597. 
  3. ^ NTI, Securing the Bomb. Russia
  4. ^ Politkovskaya, Anna (2005). Putin's Russia: Life In A Failing Democracy. Metropolitan Books, 26. ISBN 0805079300. 
  5. ^ a b c d e Obituary: Salman Raduyev, The Independent, Dec 16, 2002
  6. ^ a b Salman Raduyev, “terrorist number 2,” was renowned as a “talking head” in the terrorist environment, Pravda, 16.02.2005
  7. ^ Chechen rebels survive, prolong hostage crisis, CNN, January 24, 1996
  8. ^ Chechen rebel leader killed, reports say, CNN, March 6, 1996
  9. ^ Raduyev Resurfaces To Claim Bus Blasts, The Moscow Times, July 19, 1996
  10. ^ a b Chechen rebel back from dead to wage holy war, The Independent, Jul 19, 1996
  11. ^ A serene sky over Ichkeria, Chechen Republic Online
  12. ^ Maskhadov under attack, NUPI, 30.09.1998
  13. ^ Russians seize warlord for show trial on TV The Independent, Mar 14, 2000
  14. ^ a b Paradise lost, Haaretz, 15/07/2007
  15. ^ Chechen opposition demands Maskhadov's suspension NUPI, 26.10.1998
  16. ^ Chechen Islamic court sentences Raduyev, NUPI, 05.11.1998
  17. ^ a b c Rebel Chechen leader on trial CNN, November 15, 2001
  18. ^ Situation in Dagestan remains tense, NUPI, 16.09.1998
  19. ^ War clouds Chechnya's horizon, NUPI, 15.10.1998
  20. ^ Raduev calls for ban on "Wahhabism.", NUPI, 06.01.1998
  21. ^ Field commanders back parliament against Sharia Court, NUPI, 08.01.1999
  22. ^ Chechen warlord captured, BBC News, 16 March, 2000
  23. ^ Senior Russian interior ministry official abducted in Grozniy, NUPI, 08.03.1999
  24. ^ RUSSIA/CHECHNYA, Voice of America, 29-Sep-1999
  25. ^ Russia claim capture of Chechen warlord The Independent, 13 March 2000
  26. ^ Raduyev Testifies in Court, Pleads Not Guilty, The Moscow Times, November 19, 2001
  27. ^ Raduyev Maintains He Was Only Obeying Orders, The Moscow Times, March 18, 2000
  28. ^ Captured Rebel Leader Raduyev Hopes for 10 Years Gazeta.ru, 2001/11/13
  29. ^ Raduyev Gets Life Term for Terrorism and Murder, The Associated Press, December 28, 2001
  30. ^ Chechen warlord dies in jail, BBC News, 15 December, 2002
  31. ^ Russia says Chechen was not beaten, BBC News, 16 December, 2002
  32. ^ a b RADUYEV'S BODY NOT TO BE EXHUMED, RIA Novosti, 17/ 02/ 2005
  33. ^ Russians attempt to conceal Raduyev's murder, Kavkaz Center, 16 December 2002
  34. ^ Russia: Relatives, Chechen Leaders Question Official Version Of Raduev's Death RFE/RL, December 16, 2002
  35. ^ Russian Federation: Amnesty International calls for an independent investigation into Chechen fighter's death, Amnesty International, 16 December 2002

[edit] External links