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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Russian security official reports Caucasus al-Qaida chief killed in Chechnya
2006-11-28
More detail on yesterday's story.
A Jordanian who commanded foreign mercenaries in Chechnya and was reportedly al-Qaida's top emissary in the troubled North Caucasus died Sunday in a shootout with police, security officials said. Abu Khavs was killed in a four-hour gunbattle in the Dagestani town of Khasavyurt, near the Chechen border, along with four other militants, said Mikhail Merkulov, deputy director for the Dagestani branch of the Federal Security Service, or FSB.

Merkulov called Abu Khavs "a foreign mercenary of Jordanian origin" who was the main al-Qaida contact for the North Caucasus. State-run television showed a house apparently ravaged by gunfire, along with the bodies of at least five alleged militants. One FSB officer was wounded, said Irina Volkova, a spokeswoman for the service. In Moscow, the FSB's central headquarters said in a statement that Abu Khavs' presence in Dagestan signalled that he may have been trying to flee Russia and called his death a "telling psychological blow to all the fighters remaining in the North Caucasus mountains."

At least one rebel-linked website, daymonk.org, said five militants were killed in Khasavyurt, but made no mention of Abu Khavs. According to Russian security officials, Abu Khavs, whose name has also been spelled Havs or Hafs, was a commander of foreign mercenaries once active in Chechnya. As large-scale fighting has died down in Chechnya, the number of foreigners fighting there has dropped. In recent years, violence in the Russian region has mainly taken the form of hit-and-run attacks against federal forces and local allied paramilitaries.

Russian forces have killed or captured a number of Chechen rebel leaders in recent years, including the notorious warlord Shamil Basayev and Abdul-Khalim Sadulayev, who was the one-time president of the separatists' self-declared government.

Russian security officials say Abu Khavs took over as al-Qaida's top emissary in Chechnya in 2004 after the death of Saudi-born rebel chief Abu Walid. In an interview with a Turkish newspaper that was posted on the rebel-allied website Kavkaz Centre, Khavs maintained that separatist fighters were seeing new successes in their war against Russian forces, and he asserted that few fighters had responded to the amnesty offered by federal officials earlier this year. "The mere fact that the Russian authority has taken such an action testifies to the strength of the Chechen Resistance, and weakness and feebleness of the Russian army," he said according to the interview, dated Nov. 12.
Posted by:Fred

#1  DEFENSETECH.rog > RAWSTORY.com = Litvinenko, as per one scenario of several for his death by poison, may had uncovered RUSSIA-CAUSED FALSE FLAG TERRORISM, i.e. Russian SVR agents deliberately engaged in terror bombings in order to justify mil operations agz Chechnya. WHose to say they aren't pro-Russian double/triple, etc agents inside the Chechnyan rsistance.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2006-11-28 02:28  

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