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A still image taken from Russian NTV television channel
shows the body claimed to be that of Chechen rebel leader
Aslan Maskhadov outside Grozny, March 8, 2005.
(Reuters) |
Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov has been
killed by Russian troops fighting to quell a long rebellion in the mainly
Muslim Caucasus region, the Russian army announced Tuesday.
The death of Maskhadov, 53, would boost
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who built his power largely on a tough
line against the Chechen rebels. The armed campaign which Maskhadov led
had brought bombings to the very heart of Russia.
Russian television showed what it said was Maskhadov lying,
bare-chested on his back in a pool of blood, with his arms spread out on
either side. There was what appeared to be a bullet mark in his left
cheek.
"A special operation was carried out by us in the village of
Tolstoy-Yurt as a result of which the international terrorist and leader
of the rebel group Aslan Maskhadov was killed," FSB Security Service chief
Nikolai Patrushev told President Vladimir Putin.
Four close comrades of Maskhadov had been detained , Patrushev was shown
on television telling Putin. He added that there had been no casualties
among Russian security forces.
Putin asked Patrushev to double-check the report of Maskhadov's death.
Maskhadov's envoy in London, Akhmed Zakayev, said he had no hard
information but he thought the reports were true.
Moscow blames Maskhadov, who has a $10 million reward on his head, for
a string of deadly operations in Russia, including an attack on a Moscow
theater, a bombing near the Kremlin and an action against a school in the
south Russian town of Beslan.
At least 326 hostages -- half of them children -- died at the school in
Beslan last year.
Moscow also links Maskhadov, and field commander Shamil Basayev, to
groups that conducted attacks such as the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the
United States.
Recently Maskhadov had called for talks with Moscow on Chechen demands
for independence, but the Kremlin insists it will not negotiate with
terrorists.
Some critics of Moscow's policies in Chechnya saw Maskhadov as more
moderate than Basayev and a man with whom the Kremlin could negotiate.
Russian leaders, fearing a breakaway by Chechnya could trigger
secession moves by other regions in the sprawling federation, have fought
two wars in Chechnya.
Tens of thousands were killed on both sides in the first conflict from
1994-96. Putin sent troops back into the territory in late 1999 to cement
his image as a strong leader ahead of his election as president in 2000.
The territory suffered widespread devastation and thousands more were
killed.
Russia has suffered a series of humiliating setbacks in its bid to
control Chechnya, including last year's assassination of the Moscow-backed
president of the region in a bomb attack.
In 1996, Russian special forces killed the first post-Soviet rebel
leader Dzhokhar Dudayev.
Chechen resentments are rooted in dictator Josef Stalin's deportation
of the entire ethnic group in 1944 to Soviet Central Asia. He accused them
of collaborating German invaders.
Many thousands died in the
transport.
(Agencies) |