
#13
Los Angeles Times
May 1, 2003
Separatists Tied to '99 Bombings
Announcement doesn't quell suspicion that Russian officials were behind the
blasts.
David Holley, Times Staff Writer
Muslim separatists are responsible for three bombings that killed 243 people,
Russian prosecutors said Wednesday, incidents that reignited the war in Chechnya
and propelled Vladimir V. Putin into the president's office.
Critics saw the announcement of the end of the investigation of the 1999
bombings as designed to curb speculation that the attacks were orchestrated by
Russian officials seeking to create a pretext for action against Chechnya.
The two bombings in Moscow and one in Volgodonsk were organized by two Arabs,
later killed by Russian forces, who were leaders of separatist guerrillas in
Chechnya, the Russian prosecutor general's office said. It also named seven
other accused, of whom two are in custody, two are fugitives and three are dead.
These bombings and another apartment blast that year in the Dagestan region,
quickly blamed on Chechen rebels, became one of the justifications for sending
Russian troops back into Chechnya -- a move that launched the second war there
in a decade. That show of toughness helped Putin, who was prime minister at the
time, win election as president.
Self-exiled tycoon Boris Berezovsky and other critics allege that the Federal
Security Service, or FSB, the domestic successor to the Soviet-era KGB, may have
been involved in the bombings in pursuit of political goals. That idea has been
vehemently denounced by Russian authorities, but suspicions remain widespread.
Just two weeks ago, Sergei Yushenkov, a liberal lawmaker and outspoken critic
of Putin, was shot to death outside his Moscow apartment in what allies called a
political assassination. Some observers speculated that the killing was
connected to his role in an unofficial investigation into the apartment
bombings.
Critics saw Wednesday's announcement as an effort to declare all questions
about the 1999 bombings resolved before attention focuses on December
parliamentary elections and March presidential balloting.
"I have no doubts that this investigation has been conducted to suit the
interests of the Kremlin rather than to find out the truth," said Pavel
Voshchanov, a onetime spokesman for former President Boris Yeltsin. "I am
sure the investigation is being wrapped up today to suit the political agenda of
the Kremlin and to make the public at large forget about this dark episode in
recent Russian political history."
Voshchanov, now a political analyst and columnist for the daily newspaper
Tribuna, said that "the presidential image built on pure PR actions and
pure populism needs more boosting."
"The current investigation results are intended to show to the public at
large -- which is already tired of asking questions -- that law and order is
under tight control, and such a heinous crime as the blasting of the apartment
houses has been successfully resolved," Voshchanov said. "I have no
doubt that it hasn't. But the general public will not question the findings of
the prosecutor general's investigation."
Omar Ibn al Khattab and his aide Abu Umar masterminded the bombings,
prosecutors said. The former, identified as Saudi or Jordanian born, became
prominent under just the name Khattab when he was known as a warlord accused by
Moscow of running terrorist training camps in Chechnya.
The Russian news agency Interfax reported that Khattab and Abu Umar
"were killed during the counter-terrorist operation in Chechnya." Some
reports have said Khattab was poisoned.
The suspects in custody, who will now go on trial, are Yusuf Krymshamkhalov
and Adam Dekkushev. They have been charged with terrorism, deliberate murder
with aggravating circumstances, participation in illegal armed units and illegal
possession of arms. It was previously reported they took refuge in Georgia's
Pankisi Gorge, on the border with Chechnya, where they were arrested last year
and then turned over to Russia.
Both have previously been identified as ethnic Karachais, a group centered in
Karachayevo-Cherkessia, a republic near Chechnya in Russia's Caucasus region.
Authorities have said some others suspected of involvement are ethnic Avars, a
group centered in Dagestan, which borders Chechnya. All three republics are
mostly Muslim.
The fugitives, Achemez Gochiyayev and Khakim Abayev, may be hiding in
Georgia, Interfax reported. Gochiyayev allegedly rented space to store
explosives in the two Moscow buildings that were blown up, and Abayev allegedly
accompanied an explosives shipment.
"This investigation hasn't answered the main question: Who ordered the
apartment blasts in Moscow and Volgodonsk," said Anna Politkovskaya, a
political analyst and specialist on Chechnya for the daily newspaper Novaya
Gazeta. "The accusations raised by some politicians that the FSB may have
been behind the explosions have never been seriously considered by this
investigation and have never been investigated at all. And it is quite clear
that it will never happen."
That means that "it remains up to independent journalists and a very
small circle of independent politicians to continue to dig up this tragic
riddle," Politkovskaya said.
"The last politician in Russia who sincerely raised these hard questions
was Sergei Yushenkov. But he was killed."
Sergei L. Loiko in Moscow contributed to this report.
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