|
#5
The Independent (UK)
15 January 2002
Russia invented ambush by Chechens to hide
friendly-fire massacre
By Patrick Cockburn in Moscow
The ambush by the Chechens appeared highly successful. As a unit of 98
Russian soldiers entered Grozny on board nine trucks, they came under fire from
machine-guns and grenade launchers.
By the time the slaughter ended four hours later, 22 Russians were dead and
31 wounded. A Chechen commander said he had made the attack, and the Kremlin was
specific: the Chechen guerrillas had caught by surprise the interior ministry
troops, known as Omon in Russia, newly arrived from the town of Sergiyev Posad
near Moscow. The attackers got away because they had booby-trapped their escape
route.
An interior ministry general gave a similar account of the devastating ambush
to the Russian parliament.
None of it was true. In fact, the Russian soldiers fell victim to
"friendly fire". The accounts of the Chechen attack two years ago were
a cover-up.
The men from Sergiyev Posad were killed by Russian troops who believed they
were shooting at Chechen guerrillas in disguise.
Three senior Russian officers go on trial this week accused of negligence
leading to the worst Russian losses from friendly fire since the beginning of
the second Chechen war in 1999. Among the accused is Major-General Boris Fadeyev,
now the head of the Moscow region traffic police, who was then a commander in
the Russian military headquarters for Chechnya. Also on trial are Major Igor
Tikhonov, the commander of the Omon unit that shot its comrades, and Colonel
Mikhail Levchenko, an interior ministry official in Chechnya.
Information from the Russian prosecutor's office and leaks in the Russian
press say local police and an Omon unit from Podolsk in the Moscow region did
not know about the arrival of the soldiers from Sergiyev Posad. They also had
information that guerrillas wearing police uniforms might try to infiltrate
Grozny, the Chechen capital, and were waiting for them. The cover-up underlined
the difference between the war as reported in the Russian media and events on
the ground.
Although the military insists they are now in the last stages of a mopping-up
operation, Chechen guerrillas appear able to enter at will towns long under
Russian control.
|