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#10
Novaya Gazeta
No. 20
March 2002
AKHMAD KADYROV: HAD I BEEN THE DICTATOR OF CHECHNYA
An interview with Akhmad Kadyrov, head of the administration of Chechnya
Author: Anna Politkovskaya
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
AKHMAD KADYROV DISCUSSES THE CURRENT SITUATION IN CHECHNYA, AND GIVES HIS
VIEWS ON WHAT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, THE MILITARY, AND THE PEOPLE OF CHECHNYA
OUGHT TO DO. HE BELIEVES THE WAR IN CHECHNYA WILL BE OVER SOON, MOST LIKELY BY
AUTUMN THIS YEAR.
Question: What do you think of the
so-called peace talks between Kazantsev and Zakayev the Kremlin refers to every
now and then?
Akhmad Kadyrov: I have always objected to
the idea. I told the president that it would avail us nothing and that only
Maskhadov's side would benefit. That's exactly what happened.
Question: And what are these benefits you
are talking about?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Maskhadov was given
another chance at deceiving the people. When the talks began, he immediately
released several addresses to the Chechen people - that Putin had allegedly
understood pointlessness of the war, that "were it not for Kadyrov, the
troops would have been withdrawn in January, but this bastard Kadyrov rushed to
Putin to plead to leave the troops..." An influential field commander I
know was ready to lay down the arms and disband his detachment shortly before
the negotiations were announced. Guess what happened when he discovered that the
talks were about to begin. He said, "No". Other field commanders also
opted to wait and see what would happen. Had the troops been withdrawn after the
negotiations, the people would have branded them traitors for the decision to
lay down the arms.
Question: What is the current state of
affairs in these peace talks? Are they underway? Are they over?
Akhmad Kadyrov: No talks are underway,
and no are planned. Some meetings do take place because I know for a fact that
all these mujahedin are kept on the short leash by secret services. I discuss
surrender with several armed groups. Nineteen men laid down the arms and ceased
the resistance in Gudermes not so long ago, the fact utterly dismissed by the
media.
Question: Do you remain in touch
(perhaps, discuss the same thing) with field commanders like Basayev, Gelayev,
or Khattab?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Only with Gelayev. I sent
my envoys to him on several occasions. They even travelled to Georgia. He is
stalling for time. Gelayev always says he needs time to think it over. He is
waiting too.
Question: Your attitude to the so-called
Pankisi gorge problem?
Akhmad Kadyrov: I'm sorry for the
noncombatants residing there. We will do everything to have refugees return from
Georgia, Ingushetia, and even from Turkey. A spokesman for refugees in Turkey
approached us not so long ago. As I see it, our refugees are completely
abandoned there, no one helping them anymore, and they are prepared to return
home on any conditions.
As for the Pankisi gorge, this is what I can say. There are armed men there
of course. I would not call them guerrillas, however, because guerrillas are
those who are here, who are fighting. Over there, in Georgia, they are armed
refugees. I would not call Gelayev a guerrilla, for example. He has not been a
guerrilla for a long time now. Neither is Vaja Arsanov, Maskhadov's vice
president, even though he is called a direction commander. General Aslanbek
Arsayev is abroad, not a guerrilla either.
Question: All right. How would you say
the secret services should treat Arsanov, Gelayev, Arsayev?
Akhmad Kadyrov: As criminals. They are
criminals all right, otherwise they would not have been murdering the imams and
village mayors. If a mayor is assassinated, how will the people get their
pensions and other benefits? I might have understood this practice of
assassinations had Maskhadov provided the people with everything necessary. In
this case the people would not have been working for the existing regime. But
Maskhadov has not been doing it.
Question: Why do you think men like
Khattab and Basayev, the most notorious field commanders, are still at large?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Well, I have my
suspicions which I would not disclose. As soon as these commanders are taken
out, the war will be over. Some generals do not want that - they are too busy
lining their pockets (businesses, oil, etc). I do not doubt that had the
security structures wanted it, not a single oil truck would have been moving
nowadays... I pin a lot of hopes on the latest Security Council meeting where
all these problems were discussed. The president was fairly tough.
Question: What do you mean?
Akhmad Kadyrov: The president said that
more trust in the Chechens themselves was needed because only the Chechens could
restore order in Chechnya.
One other factor was discussed by the Security Council. When a person
disappears, no one tells the relatives what happened to him, and only the body
is found later. Every such episode creates at least a dozen new guerrillas. That
is why the number of guerrillas has not been going down.
Question: The major problems of modern
Chechnya are evaluated as the sweeping operations, inadequate and unjustified
use of force against the population, looting, and tortures. How do you intend to
fight the practice of sweeping operations which results in appearance of new
guerrillas?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Once again, I rely on the
latest Security Council meeting and on the president. Why is that not a single
general is ever responsible for whatever happens during the sweeping operations?
I demanded from him. The president ordered no more sweeping operations.
Unfortunately of course, this is not the first presidential order on Chechnya
which is ignored...
Question: Still, what can you do to put
an end to the military's abuse of power in Chechnya?
Akhmad Kadyrov: I'm helpless against the
military. I asked the president for this sort of power but Kazantsev objected
and acidly inquired what sort of powers Kadyrov wanted now. Was he going to
become a dictator? That's what Kazantsev asked.
Question: How did the president react?
Akhmad Kadyrov: He said that Kadyrov was
correct and that he needed broader powers. We will see now.
Question: Do you think there should be
one single leader in Chechnya?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Yes, a single person
should bear responsibility for everything. Including, before you ask, the
security structures. Future Chechnya should be a presidential republic where
everything is controlled by one man only. There will never be order in Chechnya
otherwise. The republic needs a bona fide dictator.
Question: All right, let's fancy you are
a dictator already. The army mounts a sweeping operation in Argun? It's your
move now.
Akhmad Kadyrov: Had I been the dictator,
there would have been no sweeping operations in Chechnya. I would not have
bothered with armored vehicles etc. I'd have compiled information on who is a
criminal and who is not quietly, without much noise, and visited the criminals
in nighttime. This criminal would have never been seen afterwards. Three to five
such incidents - and everyone would have got the message. This is how the NKVD
operated in its time. Everyone knew it, and everyone was afraid.
Question: What do you think of
Maskhadov's future?
Akhmad Kadyrov: He will never be a
pauper, that much is clear. He will be found a pension and a place of residence
somewhere. What's more, he himself knows it.
Question: Who will find all that for him?
The Russian Federation?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Yes. In return for some
concessions of course.
Question: Like what?
Akhmad Kadyrov: Like disowning what he
doesn't have and has not had for some time already. The powers. In a formal
manner. Like apologizing to the people. If he does all this, he will leave
Chechnya and live a normal life somewhere. That's what I've been offering him.
Question: What do you think it is going
to happen?
Akhmad Kadyrov: When Shamil is gone,
Maskhadov will undergo a dramatic change. Like a werewolf. You will all be
surprised yet. As for now, he fears Shamil.
Question: How would you estimate losses
in the second Chechen war?
Akhmad Kadyrov: No one knows exact
figures. All I know is that the second Chechen war took much more lives of the
armed men than the first one. (According to field commanders, 2,740 armed men
were killed in the first Chechen war. In this war, 1,200 lives were lost in
Komsomolskoye alone.) As for losses sustained by noncombatants, no one has
counted them. It will probably be done only when the war is over.
Question: When do you think that will be?
Akhmad Kadyrov: This year, I think.
Before autumn.
Question: How will we know it's happened?
Akhmad Kadyrov: By the formal
announcement that those cut- throats, Basayev and Khattab, are gone.
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