Russians refuse
to check mass grave at Grozny
3 April 2001
Human Rights organisations accused the Russian authorities
yesterday of
refusing to investigate the discovery of more than 50 corpses at a village
close to the main Russian military base in Chechnya.
Vselevod Chernov, the Russian prosecutor, says the bodies
were those of
foreign mercenaries and many of them wore Turkish underwear, evidence that
they were fighting for Chechen rebels.
Human rights campaigners suspect the dead, discovered in
February, were
Chechen civilians detained by Russian troops. Millions of Russians wear
underclothing made in Turkey and the campaigners say this is the most absurd
of many excuses made by Russian investigators for failing to identify the
bodies. The corpses, showing signs of torture and military-style execution,
were found six weeks ago in the village of Zdorovye near the Russian base at
Khankala, close to the Chechen capital, Grozny.
Holly Cartner, executive director of the of the Europe
and Central Asia
division of Human Rights Watch, said: "The Russian government has focused
its
energy on denying any responsibility for the deaths." Campaigners believe
the
bodies are evidence that Russian forces in Chechnya are torturing and
"disappearing" Chechen civilians picked up randomly.
Among the bodies buried near Khankala was Nina Lulueva,
the wife of a judge.
Last June, Mrs Lulueva and two cousins were detained by masked men when buying
strawberries in a market in Grozny.
Human Rights Watch says all the victims appear to have
been executed. Some
bore signs of torture, including stab wounds, broken bones, scalped body parts
and ears cut off. Many had their hands tied behind them and had been
blindfolded. The 17 bodies that have been identified were people who had been
detained by Russian soldiers.
In a sign that the international community, in contrast
to the first months of
the war, is now paying little attention to Russian actions in Chechnya, Mr
Cartner says the Council of Europe human rights commissioner, Alvaro Gil-
Robles, "inexplicably failed to visit the mass grave or view the 16 bodies
that had been discovered at that time". Immediately after the first bodies
were found Russian troops sealed off the area and said the corpses had been
booby-trapped.
The grim discovery close to Khankala is evidence that several
thousand
Chechens who have disappeared after being detained by Russian forces are dead.
Anna Politkovskaya, a reporter for Novaya Gazeta, accused
a unit of paratroops
in southern Chechnya of routinely kidnapping Chechen civilians and holding
them in deep pits until their relatives paid a ransom.
By Patrick Cockburn in Moscow
The Independent (UK)