A. Fig Lee wrote:Ну и где ж там про убийства? Пока вижу только убийства направленные против русских.
Ну что вас надо все время носом тыкать?
Вот про аресты:
HRW wrote:In one recent incident, at approximately 4 a.m. on June 3, 2003, armored personnel carriers (APCs), which are used only by Russian forces, and other military vehicles encircled the ⌠OOO URS■ settlement of Chechen internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Nazran. According to several witnesses, dozens of armed men in camouflage uniforms, many of them masked, broke into peoples▓ homes, forced all the men outside and put them face down on the ground.
Over the next several hours, the armed men took pictures of the Chechen men and conducted unsanctioned searches of the IDPs▓ shelters. After the armed men left, the settlement dwellers learned that four people had been taken away. Three of them were released the next day, but one was held for sixteen days. This man, who requested anonymity, told Human Rights Watch that he was kept in solitary confinement in an unknown location in Grozny and was never informed of the grounds for his arrest.
Вот про стрельбу в мирных жителей:
HRW wrote:
Chechen displaced persons are not the only victims of the escalating violence. On June 10, three Ingush civilians≈sixty-five-year-old Tamara Zabieva and two of her sons, Ali and Umar Zabiev≈were returning from their potato field near the village of Galashki, when their truck came under heavy machinegun fire, injuring Zabieva in the back, neck, and head. The brothers took their mother out of the car and Umar stayed with her while Ali ran to the village for help.
Local Ingush police who arrived about an hour later found Zabieva unconscious and sent her to the local hospital, but were unable to find Umar. His body, bearing clear marks of torture and gun shot wounds, was discovered the next morning in a nearby forest. The Ingush police said that evidence suggests involvement by federal servicemen, but the military procuracy has refused to take over the case.
While Galashki has in the past been the scene of clashes between Russian federal forces and Chechen rebel fighters, Human Rights Watch has no indication that any such activity took place in the area that day.
In a separate incident near the same village on June 4, sixteen-year-old Imran Guliev was sitting on a riverbank with three friends, when a column of APCs drove by and a soldier sitting on top of one of the vehicles shot at the boys, wounding Imran in the leg. The military procuracy has to date refused to open an investigation into the incident, despite several witness testimonies describing the soldier and indicating the number of the APC involved.
⌠Russian authorities have the right and responsibility to counter rebel activity in Ingushetia,■ said Andersen. ⌠But these operations have to conform with Russian and international law, including the prohibition against targeting civilians.■
Вот про убийство:
HRW wrote:
Human Rights Watch that on February 16, 2003, a group of about fifteen armed and masked men in uniforms riding in military vehicles and speaking unaccented Russian took away her two sons, ⌠Kharon■ and ⌠Aslanbek.■ The armed men took the brothers to an ad hoc detention center in Grozny, where they questioned Aslanbek K., beating him with a rifle butt on his face, legs, and kidneys; they broke his nose in several places with a heavy metal flashlight. It is unclear when Kharon was killed; on February 17, the guards loaded Aslanbek K. and his brother▓s corpse in a car and drove them to a an abandoned chemical plant where they tied the two together, placed them under a large slab of concrete and put explosives between their bodies. Before leaving, they fired a bullet at Aslanbek▓s head but missed, causing only a superficial wound. Aslanbek K. managed to free himself before the explosives went off, and return home.