Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chechnya rebels’ kin to be punished

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MOSCOW — After a rebel raid that left 25 people dead, Chechnya’s Kremlin-backed strongman said Friday that the families of rebels who take part in killings will now be punished by being deported and having their houses destroyed.

Thursday’s clashes in Grozny dented an image of stability created by Chechnya’s regional leader Ramzan Kadyrov after two separatist conflicts. The violence raised fears of more attacks in Chechnya and widening unrest in the rest of Russia’s volatile North Caucasus region.

Kadyrov, who has relied on a feared security force of former rebels like himself to pacify the province, said he would avenge the deaths of 14 police officers, including his relative, who died in clashes with the Islamic rebels. He said 11 attackers were killed and 36 policemen were wounded. Earlier official reports had said 10 police officers and 10 rebels were killed.

In a message Thursday on his Instagram account, which Kadyrov uses to issue public statements, he said that “the time when they said that parents can’t be held accountabl­e for the action of their sons and daughters has come to an end.”

He warned that a father who sees that his son has joined the rebels should report him to the authoritie­s or stop him by any other means before he spills blood.

“If a militant in Chechnya kills a policeman or any other person, the militant’s family will be immediatel­y banished from Chechnya without the right to come back, and their house will be razed to the ground,” Kadyrov said.

He said he didn’t care about criticism from rights activists. Internatio­nal human-rights groups long have accused Kadyrov of rampant abuses, including arbitrary arrest, torture and extrajudic­ial killings.

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