June 23, 2005
Russia: Scandal Brews Over Raid In Chechnya
by Claire Bigg
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A raid carried out by special security forces of the Russian army on a Chechen village inhabited by ethnic minorities on 4 June is turning into a major scandal. In the wake of the brutal raid, hundreds of ethnic Avars, a group indigenous to Chechnya, fled to safety toward the neighboring province of Daghestan. Now, a representative of Russian President Vladimir Putin is calling the raid an act of sabotage against the Russian state.
Moscow, 23 June 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Dmitrii Kozak, the presidential envoy to the Southern Federal District, was in Chechnya yesterday to try to calm tensions following a violent raid on Borozdinovskaya, a Chechen village largely inhabited by ethnic Avars.
About 1,000 Avars say special force belonging to the Russian Army carried out a sweep operation on their village in early June.
They say the heavily armed assailants killed a 77-year-old man, abducted 11 male villagers, and set several houses on fire. The 11 men are still missing.
In the wake of the early-June attack, the villagers fled their home with their belongings loaded onto trucks and set up a tent camp in a field several hundred meters on each side from the border between Chechnya and Daghestan.
Speaking in the Chechen capital Grozny yesterday, Kozak expressed outrage at the raid, calling it an act of “sabotage” against Russia, Daghestan, and Chechnya. He vowed the Russian government would not let the violence go unpunished.
"This incident, as well as everything that had happened before it, is outrageous," Kozak said. "It is clear that neither the people [local residents] nor we [authorities] should put up with the enormous moral and material damage that has been caused. Those officials responsible for this should be punished.”
On the same day, the head of the Shelkovskii district, where the village is located, was fired by the pro-Moscow Chechen administration and a criminal case was launched for “abduction” and “extortion."
Russian Deputy Prosecutor-General Nikolai Shepel, speaking in Vladikavkaz yesterday, joined Kozak’s efforts to calm passions.