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#14
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
Chechnya Weekly
Volume 4, Issue 5
February 20, 2003
CASUALTY FIGURES
How many Russian soldiers have died in the current Chechen war? Russian
officials issued dramatically conflicting accounts on February 17, with the
Defense Ministry in Moscow contradicting figures released earlier in the day by
the military headquarters for the Northern Caucasus. In a chilling example of
Soviet-style news management, the country's best-known news agency changed its
report to keep up with the change in the official line.
Russia's Itar-Tass news agency reported on February 17 that some 4,739 were
killed in Chechnya in the year 2002, with another 13,108 wounded and 29 missing.
The agency cited the North Caucasus Military District, which is in command of
federal troops in the breakaway republic. The figures, which were for just the
one calendar year of 2002, vastly exceeded previous official tolls. For example,
the Interfax news agency quoted the Russian military in December as putting the
number of deaths of Russian serviceman at a cumulative total of 4,705 since the
current war began three years earlier in late 1999.
But when Associated Press correspondent Sergei Venyavsky contacted the North
Caucasus headquarters on February 17, a spokesman, Major Igor Kaverin, denied
that the casualty report had come from that headquarters. Kaverin refused to
provide any figures. Another denial came from the Defense Ministry, which
claimed that only 4,572 Russian troops had died in action in Chechnya from the
autumn of 1999 to December 23, 2002.
According to the Associated Press account, Itar-Tass at first responded to
these denials by stating that it stood by its initial account. But within hours,
the Russian agency replaced that report with another story providing the same
figures as the Defense Ministry's. Venyavsky reported that "A duty editor
at Itar-Tass, which considers itself the state central information agency,
refused to provide any explanation of the contradictory reports."
The Associated Press reporter also telephoned Valentina Melnikova, head of
the Soldiers' Mothers of Russia, an organization that works to protect Russian
military draftees from official and unofficial abuses. Based on her own group's
sources, such as soldiers' families, she said they estimate that about 11,000
servicemen have been killed in Chechnya and more than 30,000 wounded since the
current war began. Their estimate for the earlier Chechen war, which lasted from
1994 to 1996, is 14,000 dead as compared with the official figure of 5,500.
The Russian website Gazeta.ru noted of the contradictory reports that
"many things remain ambiguous. Whether or not the official figures include
those who died in hospital of wounds, or just those killed in action is unclear.
There are no statistics on those who were wounded and then returned to the
ranks, and no reports on the seriousness of the wounds and injuries that the
military servicemen have suffered in Chechnya."
Also, these figures do not include civilian deaths of either Russians or
Chechens, which a team led by human-rights activist Sergei Kovalev has estimated
as exceeding 50,000 in the first war alone.
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