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Ahmed BRAGIMOV
By Colin Mcmahon - Chicago Tribune
Wednesday, December 22, 1999
MEKENSKAYA, Russia - Ahmed Bragimov, witnesses say,
was acting alone when he went on a ghastly shooting spree in the Chechen
town of Mekenskaya.
He targeted only Russians, survivors said. He was
described as methodical, vowing to kill as many people as he could
before Russian troops arrived to seize the town.
Bragimov shot to death at least 34 people, leaving
their bodies scattered about in gardens and doorways and muddy streets.
And though there is no evidence that he was working on orders of Chechen
guerrillas now fighting Russian troops in the breakaway republic, most
people left in Mekenskaya see Bragimov and the rebels as one and the
same.
"He was a killer and a thief, just as they all are,"
said a man in Mekenskaya. "The Chechens are all bandits. They would all
kill us if they could."
The latest war in Chechnya has deepened the animosity
- hatred, for some - between ethnic Chechens and the minority Russians
who make the republic their home.
Russians and Cossacks in places such as Mekenskaya
say they want all Chechens, fighters and civilians alike, run off their
land. Some Chechen refugees from Grozny and other cities say there never
will be peace as long as ethnic Russians are in charge.
Moscow's aim is to either subjugate or eliminate the
estimated 4,000 Chechen fighters still battling Russian troops.
That campaign is intensifying.
Chechen fighters today claimed to have encircled and
inflicted heavy losses on a force of Russian paratroopers who parachuted
into the mountains to cut off rebel supplies.
Meanwhile, federal forces stepped up their barrage
today on the Chechen capital, Grozny, the last major town occupied by
the rebels in the breakaway republic.
Russian troops fought hundreds of militants yesterday
on the edge of Chechnya's southern mountains, and government forces
pressed on with their bombardment of the capital, Grozny.
Russian forces were battling an estimated 500 rebels
near the town of Serzhen-Yurt, 18 miles southeast of Grozny, the
Interfax news agency reported, citing Russia's military command. Federal
jets and artillery also pounded settlements across Chechnya's south.
The head of Russia's forces in Chechnya, Viktor
Kazatsev, spoke yesterday of a planned "special operation" to free
Grozny from Muslim rebels but denied again that an all-out assault was
planned.
The Russians say they could take Grozny in a day but
are going slowly to keep down casualties among their soldiers. Rumors
have swirled around Mozdok, the Russian army's headquarters in the
region, that a major assault on Grozny was scheduled for today through
Friday. The Defense Ministry denied it.
Chechen refugees from Grozny say tens of thousands of
people may remain trapped in the capital. They claim that Russian
officials, at best, care little about Chechen lives.
At worst, a few Chechens say, Moscow is trying to
wipe them out.
"We hear what they are saying, `Chechnya without
Chechens,' " said Ramazan Shamayev, 30, who fled Grozny at the end of
last week, leaving behind a mother determined to protect her property
should Russian soldiers take control.
A recent arrival to a refugee processing camp within
Chechnya, Shamayev is not so lucky to have space in a heated tent - 40
people in tents designed for 20. Instead, he sleeps on a table in the
mess hall, surrounded by young mothers and their children. At mealtime
he grabs his few possessions and wanders, and the tables fill up with
watery soup, sugarless tea and refugees whose stomachs churn from hunger
and nerves.
Chechen refugees bristle at commands from Russian
soldiers. They complain that they must beg or pay for everything, even a
chunk of bread.
Most Chechens believe that Moscow engineered this
latest war not to target the Chechen race but to further the political
career of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
Yet the Chechen collective memory is strong, of
Chechens fighting brutal czarist forces in the 19th century, of Stalin
deporting about 750,000 Chechen civilians to Kazakstan during World War
II. Some wonder if Russia again is eager to rid itself of its so-called
"Chechen problem" by ridding itself of its Chechens.
"We're not people to the Russians," said Nala, a 26-year-old
mother of two. "We're criminals, terrorists, all of us. They say this is
a war against criminals, but whom are they killing? This is genocide."
It is what the Chechens deserve, say some in
Mekenskaya.
On a sunny day, Larisa Chikova was recalling how she
and others hid from Bragimov as he moved through Mekenskaya killing
people on Oct. 8.
Bragimov himself was caught by townspeople and beaten
to death.
"He wasn't a Wahhabist," Chikova said of Bragimov,
using a term that in the Caucasus means any kind of Islamic
fundamentalist. "He just hated Russians. They all feel that way about
Russians."
Russian officials insist they are not waging war
against the Chechen people, although human-rights activists and Western
critics say their bombing campaigns have caused too many civilian
casualties.
Russians blame Chechen militants for a series of
terrorist bombings across Russia that killed nearly 300 people and now
refer to anyone opposing the Russian march into Chechnya as a bandit or
terrorist.
The two groups coexisted, uneasily as it might have
been sometimes, before the first Chechen war in 1994-96. Even after the
first war, most Chechens seemed to separate their hostility toward the
military from how they felt about the Russian people as a whole.
The conflicts and Chechnya's isolation from Russia
have tested friendships and have bred suspicion even among people with
no role in the fighting.
"The world's experience shows that fears of ethnic
groups are much easier to wake up than to put to rest," said Alexander
Iskandaryan, who heads the Center for Caucasian Studies in Moscow.