#26 - JRL 2008-78 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
April 18, 2008
Editorial
The Dangers Of Crossing A Strongman
The conflict that boiled over this week between Chechen President Ramzan
Kadyrov and a powerful rival clan highlights some troubling logic in the
Kremlin's pacification of Chechnya in recent years.
Kadyrov, whom President Vladimir Putin has named a Hero of Russia, seems to
be winning a battle of egos with Sulim Yamadayev, another Hero of Russia who,
like Kadyrov, is a former rebel who switched sides to fight with federal troops
in Chechnya. A grateful Kremlin has rewarded Yamadayev and his two brothers,
Ruslan and Badruddi. Sulim Yamadayev was allowed to head up the Defense
Ministry's elite Vostok battalion in the republic, while Ruslan Yamadayev was
elected to the State Duma in 2003 on the United Russia ticket.
In another apparent sign of gratitude, Badruddi Yamadayev -- who was
sentenced to 11 years in prison for attempted murder in 2003 -- was granted an
early release under unclear circumstances and somehow allowed to command a
platoon in the Vostok battalion, Interfax reported.
Kadyrov, of course, has greater leverage in Moscow than the Yamadayev
brothers, who are thought to enjoy the support of top generals distrustful of
the Chechen president. He has good relations with both Putin and Dmitry Medvedev.
Kadyrov, therefore, probably feels justified in his decision to unleash his
fury on the Yamadayev clan after a convoy of Vostok battalion vehicles refused
to yield to his motorcade Monday, resulting in several car collisions.
At least two Vostok soldiers have been killed since the standoff, the
Yamadayevs' property has been searched, and Badruddi Yamadayev, who was leading
the Vostok convoy, has been hit with charges that could land him in prison for
five years.
Chechnya's parliament has demanded that the Defense Ministry expel Sulim
Yamadayev from Vostok, which would make all Interior Ministry and Defense
Ministry units in the republic manned by ethnic Chechens completely loyal to
Kadyrov.
It is unclear what, if any, control the federal government would have in the
republic if the local strongman's loyalists are calling the shots in military
and police units that technically report to Moscow.
Kadyrov's press service issued a flurry of news releases accusing the
Yamadayev brothers of murder, torture, extortion and kidnapping over the course
of several years.
One may wonder why Kadyrov, whose own fighters have been accused by human
rights activists of similar crimes, waited until now to make allegations against
the Yamadayevs. A Kadyrov aide shed some light on the possible reasoning behind
the delay. The Yamadayevs have been trying to oust Kadyrov, and the
fender-bender became "the last straw," the aide told The Moscow Times.
The implicit, disturbing logic is that local commandos are free to kill,
torture and kidnap people in Chechnya -- as long as they don't cross Kadyrov.
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