$10 Million Bounty
Russia Paid Bounty on Chechen Rebel Leader (Reuters)
Russia said on Tuesday it had paid millions of dollars to reward the people who helped it find and kill Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov, as an outcry grew over Moscowâs refusal to return his body for burial.
Maskhadov was killed a week ago in what troops said was a targeted raid, but Russian and foreign media raised questions over the manner of the veteran rebelâs death and activists have slammed the decision to bury him in an unmarked grave.
The former Soviet army colonelâs half-naked corpse has been shown repeatedly on television and critics say Russiaâs failure to treat him with dignity in defeat threatens to radicalise Chechen rebels further.
The Federal Security Service (FSB), successor to the Soviet-era KGB, said it had received a tip-off from citizens responding to a $10 million bounty on the leaders of the Chechen separatist movement in September 2004.
âThis helped us establish the precise location of the international terrorist and band leader of the Chechen republic Aslan Maskhadov and conduct a special operation,â an FSB spokesman said.
Maskhadov led resistance to Moscowâs rule in Chechnya for a decade and his killing was a notable success for Russian forces.
But analysts say the relative moderateâs death could open the way for extremists to take full control of separatist forces. And activists say the decision to invoke Russiaâs anti-terrorism law and refuse to give his body for burial by relatives, who have already appealed for its return, is a violation of human rights.
The government’s moves seem pretty ill-advised. As the story notes, they’ll likely provoke extremists, who are bound to assume more power anyway with Maskhadov’s death. In addition, those who worry about Vladimir Putin’s recent usurpation of power will have their fears confirmed.
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I am not so sure that the Russian thinking is wrong. The unmarked burial place seems a very good idea. The attempt to de-mysitfy a charismatic leader by showing humiliating pictures of his defeat may succeed. Though it seems certain to provoke some, it is not certain that it will only provoke.
Extremists don't require much in the way of provocation, so it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to worry about it.
Where's the outcry?
Can you imagine if Saddam Hussein were shown in less than sartorial splendor, the outcry that would erupt?
Actually, of course, if you look at the coverage of the time....
I hope we do something similar when we get Bin Laden.
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