Chechen- Archives - Intro
"If fornication should become widespread you should know that this has never happened without God sending new diseases to the people which their forbears didn't suffer from . If people should begin to cheat in weighing out goods then know that this has never happened without drought and famine befalling the people, and their rulers oppressing them. If people should withhold Zakat then you should realize that this has never happened without the rain being stopped from falling, and were it not for the animal's sake it would never rain again.
If people should break their covenant with God and His Messenger you should realize that this has never happened without God sending an enemy against them to take some of their possessions by force. If the leaders do not govern according to the Book of God, you should realize that this has never happened without God dividing them into groups and making them fight one another."
Originally
Posted on Al Jazeera 22-06-2004.
Chechnya's 200-year independence struggle
Tuesday 22 June 2004, 12:59 Makka Time, 9:59 GMT
The war in the north Caucusus has its origins in a 200-year old
struggle of Chechen people to shake off Russian rule.
- A mountainous region in the Caucasus range, Chechnya is inhabited
by a mainly Muslim population with a fiercely independent spirit.
- The conflict with Russia dates back to the late 18th century when
Shaikh Mansur led a struggle against Tsarist rule.
- Josef Stalin, fearing Chechens would be disloyal during the second
world war, deported the entire nation in 1944 to Central Asia
where thousands perished. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev let them
return in 1957.
- After Dzhokhar Dudayev declared independence at the end of Soviet
rule, President Boris Yeltsin sent in troops in December 1994 and
Russia became mired in war. Stiff rebel resistance led to a truce
being signed and Moscow withdrew its forces.
- During three years of de facto independence, Chechnya was gripped
by lawlessness. After some former rebels took the independence
struggle to neighbouring Dagestan in 1999 and Vladimir Putin, then
prime minister, blamed rebels for bombings in Russian cities, troops
were sent back to Chechnya and separatist leaders fled.
Putin, as president, started establishing local rule, appointing Akhmad Kadyrov head of a loyalist administration in 2000. Kadyrov waskilled in a May 2004 bomb attack at a Grozny stadium which Moscow blamed on Chechen separatists. - Separatists have staged daily attacks on Russian troops. In the most daring raid in October 2002, rebels seized a Moscow theatre - 41 separatists and 129 civilians died, most from noxious gas used by Russian forces staging a rescue. - The conflict is complicated by the presence of oil in Chechnya and its strategic location as a gateway to the Caspian which lies to the region's east.
Key figures
Akhmad Kadyrov - Kadyrov, among at least six killed in
the May bombing, was a former clergyman who fought on the rebel side in the first 1994-1996 war. He later made peace with the Kremlin and was appointed by Putin in 2000 as head of a pro-Moscow local administration.
Aslan Maskhadov - In the first war, Maskhadov was rebel
chief of staff. He won a 1997 election, recognised by Moscow, to become president of a de facto independent Chechnya, but struggled to establish his authority. He has been in hiding since Russian troops retook the capital Grozny in 2000.
Shamil Basayev - The most feared separatist commander, Basayev led the 1999 incursion into Dagestan, cited as grounds for the second war, and is said to have lost a foot after escaping.