Thursday, 15 May 2003

PUTIN PUSHES AMNESTY FOR CHECHEN REBELS

Published in News Digest

By empty (5/15/2003 issue of the CACI Analyst)

Russian President Vladimir Putin asked lawmakers to offer amnesty to Chechen rebels who lay down their arms, pushing ahead with efforts to bring normalcy to the war-ravaged republic despite recent suicide attacks. The announcement came a day after a woman with explosives strapped to her waist blew herself up in the midst of thousands in the village of Iliskhan-Yurt in southeastern Chechnya during a Muslim festival killing herself and at least 15 others in an apparent attempt on the life of Chechnya\'s Moscow-backed chief administrator. Earlier this week, suicide bombers detonated a truck filled with explosives at the edge of a Chechen government compound, killing 59.
Russian President Vladimir Putin asked lawmakers to offer amnesty to Chechen rebels who lay down their arms, pushing ahead with efforts to bring normalcy to the war-ravaged republic despite recent suicide attacks. The announcement came a day after a woman with explosives strapped to her waist blew herself up in the midst of thousands in the village of Iliskhan-Yurt in southeastern Chechnya during a Muslim festival killing herself and at least 15 others in an apparent attempt on the life of Chechnya\'s Moscow-backed chief administrator. Earlier this week, suicide bombers detonated a truck filled with explosives at the edge of a Chechen government compound, killing 59. In a letter accompanying the bill, Putin said the amnesty offer was \"an act of humanism ... aimed first of all at creating additional conditions for the establishment of peaceful life in the Chechen Republic,\" the Kremlin press service said. He said it would apply to those rebels who had laid down their weapons over the decade ending on Aug. 1 this year, but would not cover foreigners or Russian citizens who were guilty of murder, kidnapping, rape or other especially serious crimes. Chechen administrator Akhmad Kadyrov was not hurt in Wednesday\'s attack, but two of his bodyguards were injured, said Maj. General Ruslan Avtayev, head of the Ministry of Emergency Situations in Chechnya. The ITAR-Tass news agency reported that five of Kadyrov\'s bodyguards were killed in the attack in Iliskhan-Yurt, a village about 15 miles southeast of the capital, Grozny. In all, 16 people were killed, including two who died in a hospital overnight, Avtayev said. The attack wounded 143 people, of whom 43 were in grave condition, he said. (AP)
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The Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst is a biweekly publication of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program, a Joint Transatlantic Research and Policy Center affiliated with the American Foreign Policy Council, Washington DC., and the Institute for Security and Development Policy, Stockholm. For 15 years, the Analyst has brought cutting edge analysis of the region geared toward a practitioner audience.

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