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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Russian Agents Kill Ex-Gitmo Detainee
2007-06-27
A man formerly held in the U.S. detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was killed Wednesday in a shootout with security agents in a restive North Caucasus republic, Russia's top security agency said.

Ruslan Odizhev was killed amid gunfire that erupted when agents tried to arrest him and another man in Kabardino-Balkariya, a region near Chechnya that is plagued by violence linked both to crime and to religious tensions, the Federal Security Service said in a brief statement.

The service, known by its Russian acronym FSB, said Odizhev had been held at Guantanamo Bay and was believed to have been a supporter of the Taliban. Odizhev was one of seven Russians released from the detention facility in 2004; his whereabouts recently had been unknown.

The FSB did not specify why agents were trying to detain him, but said he was a suspect in the 1999 bombings of apartment buildings in Moscow and Volgodonsk and that he took part in a 2005 insurgent attack on police and government facilities in Nalchik, the capital of Kabardino-Balkariya.

That attack left 139 people dead, including 94 militants. Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev, who was killed in 2006, claimed credit for planning the attack.

The FSB said Odizhev was the "spiritual leader" of Yarmuk, an Islamic extremist organization connected to an array of violence in the region.

The office of the republic's top prosecutor, Oleg Zharikov, said Odizhev was killed in Nalchik and that three homemade explosive devices were found on his body. It said he and a rebel named Anzor Tengizov were cornered by agents in the courtyard of an apartment building across the street from a mosque in the central part of the city.

Odizhev and six other Russians who had been detained in Afghanistan were released from Guantanamo in 2004 after investigators said they found no evidence of their involvement with the Taliban. Several were briefly jailed after returning to Russia.

In March, Human Rights Watch charged that the seven had been tortured or harassed and abused by Russian law enforcement agents since their return.

One of them, Rasul Kudayev, is in custody in Nalchik on charges of participating in the 2005 attack. His mother told The Associated Press this spring that he had been repeatedly beaten.

Two others, Ravil Gumarov and Timur Ishmuratov, were sentenced last year to prison terms of 13 and 11 years for blowing up a natural gas pipeline even though they had been acquitted of the charges in an earlier trial.

Posted by:Delphi

#6  I like Barbara's idea. Ship them all out on thoe "black, unmarked jets". Release them in Chechnya with empty AK's. C ya later.
Posted by: anymouse   2007-06-27 23:17  

#5  Hey, I've got an idea!

Why don't we close Gitmo and release everyone there to Russia?

Win-win for everybody all the actual humans involved.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2007-06-27 19:39  

#4  So I guess we owe Pootie on this one.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-06-27 17:35  

#3  Bad Boys, Bad Boys, whatcha gonna do?
Whatcha gonna do when they come for you?
Die like rats, What your'e supposed to do.
That's what you do when they come for you.
Bad Boys, Bad Boys , deaders too.
That's what you do when they come for youuuuuu.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2007-06-27 17:13  

#2  Or we could simply combine the two approaches: catch and then release into the line of fire of a firing squad.
Posted by: Jonathan   2007-06-27 15:30  

#1  Russian approach works better than the "catch and release" program.
Posted by: JohnQC   2007-06-27 15:12  

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