
#10
The Globe and Mail (Canada)
December 4, 2002
Theatre hostages sue city of Moscow
By MARK MACKINNON
With a report from Associated Press
MOSCOW -- A group of former Moscow theatre patrons taken hostage when Chechen
militants stormed the stage during an Oct. 3 performance are suing the Russian
capital for millions of dollars in damages.
The ex-hostages, survivors of a three-day standoff that ended with at least
170 people dead, claim they are entitled to compensation under Russia's
antiterrorism law.
"We're not blaming anyone, but according to the law on fighting
terrorism, compensation should be paid by the authority of the territory on
which the terror act took place," said Igor Trunov, the group's lawyer.
Mr. Trunov said eight people -- five former hostages and three relatives --
have joined the lawsuit so far, claiming "moral damages." Seven of the
plaintiffs are seeking $1-million (U.S.) each, while the eighth is asking for
$500,000.
The lawyer said the law is so clear on the matter that there's little
question of whether they will win the case. It is the size of the damages that
remains a question.
"It may be very little, just a formal amount. But the main thing is to
raise this problem for the first time. There are many invalids and sick people
who are left alone with their pain, sufferings and torture after terror acts in
Russia," he said.
More than 800 theatregoers were taken hostage for three days in the incident,
by a band of rebels demanding the withdrawal of Russian forces from the
breakaway republic of Chechnya. The standoff ended when Russian special forces
stormed the theatre, killing the 41 militants. However, 129 of the hostages also
died in the raid, almost all of them from the effects of a mysterious gas used
to subdue the hostage-takers.
The office of Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov issued a statement criticizing the
lawsuit, saying that "the Chechen issue and its consequences are not within
the jurisdiction of the Moscow authorities in any way."
The federal government has already agreed to pay about $3,000 to the families
of each of the dead, and half that amount to hostages who survived.
Some say that's not enough, however.
Anna Lyubimova, who appeared at the court, said her 71-year-old father,
Nikolai Lyubimova, survived the hostage ordeal but was left with his left arm
and parts of his face paralyzed. She said he can no longer feed himself properly
and his meagre pension is not enough to pay for medical treatment.
"His health is totally damaged," Ms. Lyubimova said. "He's
afraid to go outside by himself; he's not given any material help to buy
medicines."
In yet more fallout from the hostage-taking, Denmark announced yesterday that
it was releasing Chechen envoy Akhmed Zakayev, a top aide to separatist leader
Aslan Maskhadov.
Mr. Zakayev, 43, had been in custody since Oct. 30, when he was arrested in
Copenhagen in the aftermath of the Moscow hostage-taking.
Russian officials protested, but Jakob Scharf, the head of the Justice
Ministry's international department, said Mr. Zakayev was released because there
was not enough evidence that he was connected to terrorism.
Meanwhile, in Ingushetia, the Russian republic bordering Chechnya, Russian
forces dismantled a tent camp that was housing 1,500 Chechen refugees, ignoring
appeals by the United Nations refugee agency. Most of the inhabitants returned
to Chechnya after the tents were torn down.
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