Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chechnya firefight

At least 19 dead in gunbattles just ahead of Putin speech

- MUSA SADULAYEV Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nataliya Vasilyeva and Lynn Berry of The Associated Press.

A gunbattle broke out early Thursday in central Grozny, Russia, in the republic of Chechnya, causing damage to a publishing house. The violence began hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin began his annual state of the nation address in Moscow.

GROZNY, Russia — Security forces in the capital of Russia’s North Caucasus republic of Chechnya stormed two buildings, including a school, in fierce gunbattles with militants early Thursday that left at least 19 dead, authoritie­s said.

The fighting, broke out hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin was to give his annual state of the nation address in Moscow.

In his address, Putin said he was confident that local Chechen forces were capable of dealing with the “rebels,” who he suggested were receiving support from abroad.

The National Anti-Terrorist Committee said militants traveling in three cars entered the republic’s capital, Grozny, at 1 a.m., killing three traffic police at a checkpoint, and then occupied the 10-story Press House in the center of the city. The federal agency said six gunmen were killed inside the building, which was gutted in a blazing fire that also spread to a nearby market.

More gunmen were later found in a nearby school and security forces were sent to “liquidate” them, the agency said. No students or teachers were in the school when it was seized by the militants, RIA Novosti quoted vice principal Islam Dzhabrailo­v as saying.

Russian state television showed video footage of security officers firing automatic weapons and grenade launchers at the three-story school, its windows left shattered and charred.

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, who traveled to Moscow for Putin’s address in the Kremlin, told journalist­s afterward that the security operation was completed and his forces had killed at least nine militants.

The National Anti-Terrorist Committee said 10 officers were killed and 28 wounded in the fight against the militants, who it said were from a known group operating in the North Caucasus.

Kadyrov said the militants were connected to Doku Umarov, a Chechen and longtime leader of Islamic militants in the North Caucasus who died last year.

Although unrest is common across the largely Muslim region in southern Russia, forceful security measures adopted by Kadyrov spared Grozny significan­t violence for several years.

The relative calm has allowed Putin to claim success in subduing the Islamic insurgency in Chechnya after years of war.

In October, however, a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a concert hall in Grozny, killing five policemen and wounding 12 others as the city celebrated Kadyrov’s birthday.

Dmitry Trenin, who heads the Carnegie Moscow Center, wrote in a Twitter post that “the night attack in Grozny looks senseless, except as an attempt to embarrass Putin hours before his annual address to parliament.”

Putin already was under pressure to reassure Russians as fears grow over soaring inflation and a plummeting ruble.

Life News, a news outlet believed to have links to Russian security services, cited law enforcemen­t officials as saying about 15 people seized three cars late Wednesday in the village of Shalazhi and drove to Grozny, some 30 miles away.

The Kavkaz Center website, a mouthpiece for Islamic militant groups operating in the North Caucasus, carried a link to a video message by an individual claiming responsibi­lity for the attacks. The man in the video claimed to be operating under orders from Chechen Islamist leader Aslan Byutukayev, known to his followers as Emir Khamzat.

The video could not immediatel­y be verified.

A few years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Chechnya was plunged into a full-scale war when separatist rebels pursued independen­ce for the republic. The violence was largely confined to that small republic, but rebels ventured into other parts of Russia.

A fragile peace settlement was reached with Moscow until 1999, when an insurgency movement increasing­ly inspired by radical Islamist ideas reignited the conflict. A military crackdown succeeded by years of aggressive rule by Kadyrov has quietened the region, pushing unrest to neighborin­g provinces.

Kadyrov has been widely denounced for human rights abuses, including allegation­s of killing opponents.

He has also imposed some Islamic restrictio­ns on the region, including mandatory headscarve­s for women in public.

In a message Thursday on his Instagram account, which Kadyrov uses to issue public statements, he boasted of running the operation at the Press House himself.

“Not one bandit managed to get out,” he wrote.

Kadyrov posted a picture showing the lower half of an apparently dead gunman lying beside a rifle, but it was not immediatel­y clear if it showed one of the presumed attackers.

 ?? AP/MUSA SADULAYEV ??
AP/MUSA SADULAYEV
 ?? AP/MUSA SADULAYEV ?? A firefighte­r extinguish­es a fire in a burned market pavilion in downtown Grozny, Russia, on Thursday.
AP/MUSA SADULAYEV A firefighte­r extinguish­es a fire in a burned market pavilion in downtown Grozny, Russia, on Thursday.

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