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CHECHNYA LINKS LIBRARY

April 18th 2005 · Prague Watchdog / Timur Aliyev · PRINTER FRIENDLY FORMAT · E-MAIL THIS · ALSO AVAILABLE IN: RUSSIAN 

Grozny military garrison court has already delivered 600 verdicts

Timur Aliyev

GROZNY, Chechnya – Over a period of one and a half years around 600 Russian military service personnel in Chechnya have been convicted of various crimes. This was announced at a press conference in Grozny by Aleksandr Kuznetsov, chairman of the Grozny military garrison court.

“Since September 1 2003 – the date that the Grozny military garrison court began its work – we have examined more than 600 criminal cases involving military service personnel,” he said, adding that 95 percent of them ended with verdicts being delivered, not one of them “not guilty”.

However, according to Kuznetsov only about 5 percent of these verdicts related to crimes committed against peaceful residents. The colonel gave examples of some cases.

In the first one, an official of the Kurchaloi military commandant’s office named Belyayev murdered a teenager, for which he was sentenced to 13 years of imprisonment in a strict regime corrective facility.

In the second case, a lieutenant with the Interior Ministry forces named Konovalov opened fire on a village with a submachine gun from a distance of about a kilometre, killing the local resident Makalov, for which he was sentenced to three years of imprisonment on a charge of “exceeding official powers”.

Among those responsible for the crimes committed by service personnel in Chechnya, Kuznetsov also indicts the military recruitment offices, which recruit former criminals as contract soldiers for military service in the country.

“At the time of the robbery two contract soldiers were arrested: one had tried to smother the old female owner of the house with a cushion, while the other had beaten up a 10-year -old boy. When their cases were checked, it turned out that one of the soldiers already had two previous convictions, for one of which he had already spent time in a corrective facility,” Kuznetsov relates.

With regard to crimes against peaceful residents committed by military service personnel before September 2003, Kuznetsov replies evasively. “Before the garrison court was set up in Chechnya, all cases were sent to the North Caucasus military circuit court in Rostov. And also to Bataisk, Pyatigorsk and Astrakhan. So all those cases have either been examined or are being examined,” he claims.

Translated by David McDuff.

(MD/A,B)



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