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I represent the Memorial organization which has been working in
the Caucasus, specifically in the Northern Caucasus, for several
years. We have been monitoring human rights in the region since
the early 90's.
During the first war, we organized a human rights observation mission
in areas of conflict. Between the wars, we repeatedly sent teams
both to Chechnya and to neighboring regions. Our mission has been
working in Ingushetia since the beginning of the present second
war.
Representatives of human rights organizations are virtually unable
to get into Chechnya itself due to the obstacles erected by the
Russian authorities. Nevertheless, our field workers have been able
to collect on-sight information and, frequently, from Chechnya as
well.
I'll begin with several general words about Memorial's position
on the conflict. First of all, I must say that we have a significant
amount of material enabling us to state that in the period 1996-1999,
power structures in the Chechen Republic showed a complete inability
to protect the lives and ensure the security and civil rights of
people living in Chechnya. Moreover, the state in the process of
formation manifested disregard for issues relating to human rights.
For example, here is a copy of so called Criminal Code of the Chechen
Republic Ichkeria. Everybody familiar with its will note that it
seriously violates international human rights standards. Additionally,
I should point out that the power structures of the Chechen Republic
Ichkeria failed to tackle the wave of banditry, kidnapping and criminal
violence coming from the republic and spilling into neighboring
Russian regions.
The sum of these factors allows us to state that, from our point
of view, the question of granting Chechnya the status of an independent
state cannot be on the agenda of talks on any level at the present
moment. The essence of the dangers Chechnya poses to its neighbors
is evident in the attacks of armed groups, carried out from the
Chechen territory, late summer and early fall last year. I was in
Dagestan myself at that time and I witnessed those events.
The attack on Dagestan forced the Russian government to take serious
measures to secure the lives and civil rights of the Russian as
well as the Chechen population. In order to fulfill these goals,
the use of force was acceptable. But it should have been implemented
in strict accordance with the law, selective and proportional to
the threat. The Russian leadership launched a military campaign
which cannot be considered proportional to the threat.
The operations of the Russian forces in the Northern Caucasus are
in breach of the laws and the Constitution of the Russian Federation.
Many constitutional rights have been curtailed, such as those relating
to the freedom of movement, the freedom of choice of residence,
and so on. Russian law allows for such measures - in the event of
a declaration of a state of emergency. But a state of emergency
has not been declared.
We believe that the violent means used by the Russian federal forces
and authorities in Chechnya have turned the war into a great and
terrible crime. The way force is being used by Russia, let me say
it once more, is a crime.
Of course, human rights and humanitarian laws have been seriously
violated by both sides. But the number of civilian casualties and
the scope of destruction of civilian property caused by the activities
of the Russian federal forces is incomparably higher. Moreover,
I must stress that the operations of the Russian military and police
are operations of forces under the command of the Russian state
which, by signing a number of international treaties, is obliged
to observe human rights. This fact lends particular seriousness
to the violations of Russian forces.
The war has been going on against a backdrop of constant lying.
Russian authorities have coined a whole range of phrases and terms,
such as "anti-terrorist operation", "accurate strike",
"humanitarian corridors for the exit of population", "safe
zones". They have even begun to believe these euphemisms refer
to things which actually exist. If there is any reality behind these
terms, it is a virtual reality, which has nothing to do with the
real developments in Chechnya.
There is no reason to call the current war in Chechnya an anti-terrorist
operation. Undoubtedly, it is not an "international" conflict,
which is subject to the Geneva Conventions, namely Article 3 common
to the Geneva conventions and the Second Additional Protocol. The
conflict in Chechnya has fulfilled all criteria of a conflict not
of an international character as stipulated by the Second Additional
Protocol to the Geneva Conventions. We can see a large-scale operation
with the use of air force, salvo fire and tactical rockets. Inhabited
places are attacked and nearly wiped off the face of the earth.
And Mr. Putin calls that an anti-terrorist operation. The operation
cannot be considered anti-terrorist even by Russian anti-terrorist
legislation, which again underlines the serious violation of Russia's
own laws.
Let me change the subject for a minute in order to correct some
misunderstandings which may divide some even in this audience. Some
say: "Yes, military operations were under way - but peace is
coming and the military part of the conflict in the North Caucasus
is over." Unfortunately, this is not true. These are misperceptions
intentionally disseminated by official Russian propaganda. They
are in sharp contrast with the figures provided by official Russian
representatives themselves. For example, over the week of April
27 - May 4, Russian federal forces suffered 32 deaths and 107 injuries
in Chechnya. Over the second week of May, the losses of Russian
federal forces reached as many as 51, with an additional 70 men
injured. And this was is when they were claiming that there were
no serious military operations under way. Dozens of Russian soldiers
are being killed every week.
On April 30, a debate was held on the possible commitment of long-range
bombardment aviation and an increase in ammunition for bombing mountainous
parts of Chechnya. The number of sorties for the bombardment of
these areas significantly increased in May. This shows that the
war is not over. The war is going on and there is no sign that it
will stop. Information coming from the mountains now is very limited
and poor - and this is due to deliberate censorship by the Russian
authorities.
Let me return to the assessment of the conflict. I should say that
if this were an anti-terrorist operation, it would have to have
one distinctive feature, namely selectivity. An anti-terrorist operation
should aim, first of all, at the protection of civilians and then
at the isolation and liquidation of terrorists. What do we witness
in reality? It is completely the other way around. Since the very
beginning, the operation carried out by Russian armed forces in
Chechnya has been characterized by its indiscriminate nature.
I'll give you just a few examples from different periods of the
conflict. At the beginning of the conflict, on October 27, Russian
media announced that Shamil Basayev's house of had been hit by a
rocket strike. They announced that the house had been destroyed
and that Shamil Basayev himself had survived, though some people
around him, namely his bodyguards, had died. It was presented as
a successful Russian military operation. They did not mention, however,
that the rocket strike and bombardment destroyed the entire neighborhood.
At least five twelve-flat houses were destroyed, one five-storied
house, many one-storied houses, a market, a taxi stand including
cars, passengers, and drivers. At the moment, we do not know how
many innocent people died so that several fighters and supporters
of Shamil Basayev could be killed. And we will never find out.
In the full course of this war, large numbers of civilians are killed
in an attempt to kill those who are referred to as terrorists by
the Russian government. We are not able to say how many innocent
people have died, but we know there have been thousands. T h o u
s a n d s. Russian authorities called the strike against Shamil
Basayev's house an accurate strike. There was a tremendous amount
of similar strikes throughout Grozny and, as you know, Grozny has
virtually been wiped off the face of the earth.
Here is another example from a later period of the conflict which
shows that both parties pay absolutely no attention to the interests
of the civilian population. Shali, a large town-like village, was
taken without fighting by the Russian federal forces at the end
of 1999. The federal command called that zone a safe zone. This
is another interesting term - a "safe zone".
Russian authorities encouraged refugees to return and many people
indeed started doing so. Life in the safe zone was not easy: People
were abused by those who were asked to protect them, namely by the
police troops sent to Chechnya from various parts of Russia. We
have at least one documented case of rape and murder of a woman
in Shali during that period. Another example: authorities started
distributing pensions to people who hadn¥t received them for
a long time. Pensions were distributed for the first time on February
8 and on February 9 a big crowd of people gathered at the Shali
central square in order to receive additional payments, make lists
etc. No one knew that a small group of Chechen fighters entered
Shali at that moment. The group came to the local military HQ and
surrounded it. The people had no idea about it - they were simply
surprised to see different armed people close to them. At that very
moment, a Russian tactical missile exploded above their heads. It
was a response of the Russian command to the report that a group
of fighters entered Shali. The tactical missile is estimated to
have killed, roughly speaking, some 150 civilians. Then there came
an attack by combat helicopters, which also caused civilian casualties.
The group of fighters left Shali, with quite small losses, amounting
to several men. Thus, we see that in order to kill several men,
Russian forces kill hundreds of peaceful citizens
And here is another example which exposes the direct responsibility
of the military command for the indiscriminate use of force causing
civilian deaths. This February Grozny itself was still under the
control of Chechen armed groups. The adjacent regions were already
under the control of the Russian federal forces and in these regions
so called "safe zones" were to be established. The large
village of Katyr-Yurt was declared a safe zone. Refugees were encouraged
to come back and people began to do so. As it was a safe zone, many
gathered in Katyr-Yurt, not only refugees from Katyr-Yurt, but from
other regions as well. The announcement of the zone being declared
a safe zone had been signed by Russian generals.
Later on we discovered that the same generals were simultaneously
working out a crafty and complex special operation with the aim
of luring the fighters out of Grozny. Misinformation was released
claiming that some Russian commanders were allegedly willing to
provide Chechen fighters with a safe corridor in exchange for a
large amount of money. The Chechen fighters believed it and having
paid some money they set off in the corridor deliberately provided
to them by the Russian military command. In the corridor they came
across mine fields, artillery fire, air strikes, they suffered high
losses. They managed to get to the mountains, nevertheless.
This was officially presented as an excellent and successful operation.
Russian generals spoke completely openly on TV about the fact that
they had prepared the operation. But they did not speak about the
fact that the corridor of death went through safe zones, such as
the zone in Katyr-Yurt. Thus after the Chechen fighters left Grozny
and entered a village, the village immediately came under systematic
Russian artillery fire. This was the case of Alkhan-Kala, Zakan-Yurt,
Shami-Yurt, Katyr-Yurt. Some 200 peaceful inhabitants of Katyr-Yurt
died in the village.
The village of Gekhi-Chu, closer to the mountains, fell under terrible
artillery fire after the fighters left. This was documented by Russian
television. I assume they did not understand themselves what they
were actually showing. They showed the use of vacuum charges in
the village, which was full of peaceful inhabitants. Then the footage
recorded by Western journalists on the following day was presented,
which showed women and children who were killed in the village.
The shelling of the villages was followed by mopping-up operations.
This is another dreadful word, a "mopping-up operation"
("zachistka"), which came from the police jargon and stands
for the across-the-board inspection of people and houses in a town
or village. Terrible things often occur during these operations,
such as executions, looting, violence... We have documented evidence
that in the village of Gekhi-Chu, for example, at least three people
were executed by shooting.
So this was a military operation, one of many, with the only difference
that the direct command responsibility of the generals was documented.
In my opinion the Russian command simply do not comprehend that
they must take into consideration the civilian population. They
are completely ignorant of this fact.
The detention in the above mentioned village Katyr-Yurt was indiscriminate.
Similarly in addition to indiscriminate shelling, Russian forces
carry out indiscriminate arrests. This is another aspect of the
current events in Chechnya, I mean indiscriminate arrests, the system
of filtration camps, the abuses of detainees.
What is a filtration camp? In fact, the term "filtration camp"
is not very accurate. In the previous war, filtration camps were
places where all detainees were taken. However, there is no such
term in Russian legislation. Thus they can only be considered illegal
places where Russian citizens are deprived of freedom. Now, official
status is occasionally assigned to these facilities.
For example, the famous filtration camp in Chernokozovo has official
status, namely as a pre-trial establishment (sledstvennyj izoljator).
There are other filtration camps, which have retained their name
"filtration camp" and are officially called temporary
detention facilities (izoljator vremennovo soderzhaniya). They are
established at district departments of interior forces in various
parts of Chechnya. They have an official status and the guard consists
of members of interior forces or so called "Specnaz" of
the Russian Ministry of Justice. The Specnaz is ill-famed for being
extremely cruel. It is used for suppressing prison revolts and it
acts with extreme cruelty throughout Russia. It is quite understandable
that here, in Chechnya, when it enjoys full impunity, and in the
context of war, its cruelty is amplified.
After Chernokozovo attracted public attention and the Committee
for the Prevention of Torture of the Council of Europe as well as
the delegations of the OSCE and the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe visited the place, the situation really started
improving. The staff in Chernokozovo was replaced, the food improved,
and torture and beatings stopped. A great part of the detainees
were moved to the territory of the Stavropol region. But concomitantly,
violence, brutality and torture were merely moved to other camps,
such as that in Urus-Martan.
Here is one testimony which we received from Urus-Martan. It is
from a man who asked us not to disclose his name, but we know it.
"Throughout the first night, they bet us all nearly till the
morning. They made us call: ëLong live Penza OMON! Hurrah!'
Those who refused to chant were brutally beaten. There were at least
thirty people in the cell, which was 3 metres long and 2 metres
wide. We would sit on our knees. There was no space to sit or lie.
Four of us were unable to walk anymore. ... I was called five times
for investigations. They asked me where the fighters were, who helped
them, they beat me with truncheons, rifle butts, boots. They tried
to make me sign a paper saying that I was a fighter. ... There were
also 14 fighters, many of whom were injured and had fractures. Some
of them had already suffered from gangrene but no medical care was
provided to them. ... Upon leaving, they made me sign a document
stating that they had not insulted nor beaten me." That man
was released, which means that he was innocent.
Besides official detention facilities, there are many facilities
without official status. They include various places in the territory
of military units or around road checkpoints. For example, as in
the previous war, detainees are transported to Khankala, a large
military base near Grozny. This is done officially, though Khankala
has no official status as a detention facility.
The people who are transported to the territory of military bases
are kept either in holes dug into the ground, or in vehicles for
transporting prisoners. In Khankala, railway cars for transporting
prisoners appeared. Where did they come from? We have an inkling:
Earlier this year a temporary detention facility was established
at the Chervlyonnaya railway junction. They combined railway cars
for moving prisoners, named that a temporary detention facility
and held detainees there. The Committee for the Prevention of Torture
of the Council of Europe visited the place and considered it absolutely
unsuitable for detention and insisted on its closing down. Two months
later, the Committee visited the site again. The facility had in
fact closed down and the railway cars had been moved somewhere else.
And we have now discovered the cars in Khankala. In other words,
the official temporary detention facility was closed but the cars
were moved to Khankala where detainees are ñ unofficially
- held.
Guards treat detainees in Khankala very cruelly, even more cruelly
than in other places. The reason is that people in unofficial detention
facilities are not registered anywhere. In official places, like
Chernokozovo, the staff is accountable and they keep lists of detainees.
In unofficial places, crueler methods of inquiry can be applied
to the detainees because no one will bear responsibility if something
bad happens. Detainees "disappear" there more easily.
Here is another example of how people disappear in unofficial detention
places. We have documented evidence from one of the checkpoints,
specifically, a checkpoint on the road near the village Duba-Yurt.
I underline that it is one of many checkpoints. During January,
February and March , at least three cases of disappearance of a
group of men occurred. The first case took place on January 13,
when four men were detained under the pretense of checking documents.
They then disappeared. On May 10 the inhabitants of the Tangi-Chu
village discovered the bodies of three of the men. The whereabouts
of the fourth man is still unknown.
The second case occurred on February 18, when two men disappeared.
Their relatives went off in search of them and discovered their
two cars, which were buried not deep under ground, and apparently
crushed by tanks or armored fighting vehicles. No one knows where
the two missing persons are.
The third case occurred in March. Twelve people were detained, of
whom five women were released afterwards.. These people came from
the mountain village Ulus-Kert and were accompanied by a Russian
paratrooper. Some time before that a group of Russian paratroopers
had entered the village and warned the villagers: ëOther units
are coming behind us and they will treat you very brutally. You¥d
better leave the village now.' And one of the paratroopers offered
to accompany the group of villagers to the plains. When they reached
the Duba-Yurt checkpoint, soldiers at the checkpoint took the paratrooper
aside, beat him up, claiming that he had sold himself to the Chechens
and asked him how much they had paid him. Then they took him somewhere,
released the women and detained the men, who were twelve. Nothing
has been discovered about them since, despite official inquires
sent to various Russian official bodies by relatives, us, and members
of parliament. So far, no clear responses have been offered.
We hope that criminal proceeding will be launched because it is
known that at least in two cases the checkpoint was under the command
of one specific officer and people are ready to identify him. His
real surname is not known because officers at checkpoints generally
do not use their names. So this was just one example of the numerous
disappearances which occur.
Now I'd like to say that despite these terrible stories, soldiers
do not always behave with uniform brutality. There is usually a
difference and things strongly depend on the commander. For example,
General Shamanov is known as a man who cultivates cruelty in his
units. General Troshev is a bit different, though he is is accused
of war crimes as well. We also know that younger officers behave
in very different ways. It must be stressed that people in Chechnya
themselves identify a big difference between young conscript soldiers
("srochniki"), and so called contract soldiers ("kontraktniki"),
who came to Chechnya to make money. Contract soldiers commit the
stark majority of crimes. Witnesses say that, on the other hand,
young soldiers have sheltered civilians from the abuses of contract
soldiers in many instances.
The worst thing is that serious crimes are committed by members
of law enforcement bodies, namely special police units, sent to
Chechnya from various Russian regions. This is frightening for many
reasons - we can imagine how these people who, figuratively speaking,
have tasted blood in Chechnya, will keep law and order after they
return home.
There are some distinctions to make here as well, however. For example,
on April 24 there was an incident in a small village Novaya Zhizn,
belonging to the Gelda-Gen region. Before that, Chechen fighters
attacked a Russian military convoy in the same district, near the
village Serzhen-Yurt, and killed some Russian soldiers. In response,
the OMON troops started "mopping up" many villages and
towns. They indiscriminately detained many people in Shali, who
had no connection with fighters, and severely beat them. A special
police unit from the Ural entered the Novaya Zhizn village and started
indiscriminately detaining men and beating them up. The unit also
beat women, including a pregnant one, who aborted. But there was
another special police unit in the Novaya Zhizn village, an OMON
unit coming from the Russian region Mordovia. There was somewhat
of a mutual understanding between this OMON group and the villagers.
This OMON tried to stop the abuses and thus a skirmish took place
between the two OMONs. However, the newly arrived unit was more
numerous and better armed and beat the Mordovian OMON up and rid
it of a video camera by which they tried to record the abuses. They
then beat locals and took eleven innocent men to their military
base where they tortured them. They moved these men by a helicopter
to Khankala, where they held them in railway cars for transporting
prisoners.
Then a peculiar thing happened. When journalists came to the site,
these prisoners were presented as Chechen fighters. They were, however,
allowed to comment and one man actually managed to say: "I'm
from Novaya Zhizn, I'm not a fighter, I haven't committed any offence."
After that journalists interviewed general Troshev, who responded
without hesitation: "No, they are fighters!", accusing
them of some attack or another. All of this was presented on TV.
In the evening, the inhabitants of Novaya Zhizn discovered that
people from their village had been detained and accused of being
fighters. The people from Novaya Zhizn organized a large demonstration
demanding the release of the detainees. So in addition to the scandal
involving 0the fight between the two OMONs, there was another debacle
relating to the detention of the Novaya Zhizn villagers. In the
end, the people were freed. I underline, they were officially released,
without any accusation being brought against them. They were freed
after being beaten, some of them seriously so. No apologies have
been made.
Criminal proceedings have been started against the special police
unit from the Ural by the local pro-Moscow Chechen prosecution.
However, I don't believe they will have much effect because the
prosecution on the national level, that is by Russian bodies, is
de facto dysfunctional.
At the end of my speech, Iëd like to underline once more that
the war is not over. The violations that are being committed in
close connection with and during military operations are pressing
issues for Chechnya. But what is no less important is the behaviour
of Russian law enforcement bodies in so called liberated territories.
It is crucial to ensure that those guilty of crimes are somehow
prosecuted.
[This is a translation of a spoken report.]
Oleg Orlov is the Head of the Memorial Chechnya War Program.
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