IWPR
- 19 December 2002
Posted 26 December 2002 on RELIGIOSCOPE
As
the war goes on, fundamentalist Islamists in Chechnya are
becoming bolder and more violent.
Even
for a society used to violent death, the murders of Said-Pasha
Salekhov and his son by unidentified assailants in the village
of Stariye Atagi, 20 km south of Grozny, caused extreme shock
and revulsion.
Salekhov,
aged 50, was a descendant of the ancient Arab tribe of Kureishi
- to which Mohammed himself supposedly belonged - and was
one of Chechnya's most respected religious leaders.
The
locals blame the November 21 killings on militants they call
Wahhabis - exponents of one of Islam's most belligerent movements
- but few will admit this openly. People fear for their lives
- and for good reason.
The
pro-Moscow interior ministry in Grozny reports that since
Russia began its current war in Chechnya three years ago,
some 30 prominent religious figures and upwards of 200 regional
and local government officials have died at the hands of Islamic
militants in the republic. The only reason they were killed
was that, at different times, they had had contact with Russian
troops.
"We
are caught between a rock and a hard place," admitted
the deputy governor of one of Chechnya's municipalities, who
did not want to be named. "The Russians don't trust
us as they think we collaborate with the guerrillas. On the
other hand, the Wahhabis are after us. As far as they are
concerned, we are all traitors, or kafir."
Non-governmental
organisations in Chechnya estimate that up to ten per cent
of the population now supports the hardline Islamists. But
nowadays, they can be harder to spot than before. "When
the new war began in Chechnya, many Wahhabi militants shaved
off their beards, bought themselves fake papers and dispersed
among civilian population," said Magomed Bakhaev,
deputy chief of police of the Urus-Martan district.
"Many
of them have joined the regular police force, riot police
and other interior ministry departments. There is a sprawling,
powerful network of Wahhabi militants operating across Chechnya,
which has hardly been affected by Russia's anti-extremism
effort."
Bakhaev
said the clandestine Wahhabi network recruits young Chechens
into Jamaats - militant Islamic squads - supplies them with
weapons and pays for undercover operations against Russian
troops and Chechen officials.
"They
are everywhere," he said. "They are watching
for those Chechens who collaborate with Russian authorities,
and make lists of local officials. Then the Sharia [Islamic
law] court issues death sentences in absentia to those people,
which is then carried out at the earliest opportunity."
The
militants call themselves "fighters for pure Islam",
reject all compromise, and say they are prepared to fight
to the death.
Abdul-Hamid,
26, a jamaat fighter from Argun, said he had been wounded
in the leg during his band's recent raid on a Russian checkpoint
near the town. He is currently staying with his relatives
in Grozny and undergoing treatment.
"There
is no mention of Wahhabi in the Holy Koran," he said. "This term was coined by enemies of Islam to smear
the true fighters for the purity of our religion, in order
to make us appear as some cult, or a bunch of ignorant fanatics.
"But
with Allah as my witness, they will not succeed in this. Our
creed is the same as ever - 'Islam is our religion; Koran
is our constitution; and Jihad is our quest. Death on the
path of Allah is our ultimate reward'."
Fundamentalist
Islam first appeared in Chechnya via the Arab volunteers who
came to fight the first war of 1994-6. Around this time the
first jamaats formed, which later developed into powerful
Wahhabi militias.
Several
of the Islamic radicals had fought the Soviet army in Afghanistan
and wanted to continue the struggle in Chechnya. They included
Fathi, a Chechen of Jordanian origin, and Khattab, a Saudi
who died last spring under mysterious circumstances. Khattab
has since been replaced by his deputy, known as Abu Walid,
about whom little is known. Some say that he is a Jordanian
Chechen, others claim that, like Khattab, he comes from southern
Saudi Arabia.
The
end of the first conflict left several Islamic groups in extremely
powerful positions. The Akhmadov brothers, Arbi Barayev and
Abdul Malik all became wealthy through kidnapping and taking
over oilfields.
Post-war
ruin and unemployment drove young Chechens en masse into the
hands of these Islamic militias. "Wahhabis offered
young people something the official Maskhadov administration
was powerless to provide," Mohmad Uvaisaev of Alhan-Kala
told IWPR. "They gave them a steady income. It was
blood money, of course, but who cared?"
"If
one person joined, he was issued a weapon and became a rank-and-file
mujahedin," recalls Akhmed Dalaev, a former member
of Mezhidov's Sharia Guard. "If you brought a group
of people with you, you were issued a wireless kit, an off-road
vehicle, and weapons for everyone. You became an Amir, or
commander, of your group. We were making an average of 100-300
US dollars a month."
By
the spring of 1998, most Chechens were strongly opposed to
the extreme Islamists, their criminality and calls for the
introduction of the Sharia law.
Most
Chechens are Sufi Muslims, whose religious practices are strongly
interwoven with old customs and the precepts of Chechen common
law, known as adat. Chechens worship their own saints
- evlia - who brought Islam to this mountainous country
centuries ago.
This
puts the majority of the population directly at odds with
the incomers, who have no respect for the Chechen Islamic
tradition - dismissing it as apostasy, ignorance and polytheis
- while the Wahhabis are accused in turn of being interlopers
and troublemakers.
"The
Wahhabi militias were manned by junkies, drunks and generally
people of dubious background," recalls Zaindi-Haji,
a mullah from Pervomaiskoe near Grozny. "To be sure,
there were some honest acolytes of 'pure Islam' among them,
as well, but most of them were in it only for the money.
"They
would stop at nothing to achieve their mercenary ends. They
used religion to brainwash young Chechens and cause splits
in society. This was a great evil for which they will never
be forgiven."
However,
just as support for fundamentalist Islam had all but vanished,
a new war in 1999 and Russia's subsequent brutal tactics against
Chechen civilians have driven young people back into the arms
of Wahhabi teachings and Jamaat squads.
"Our
young people have lost moral guidance," lamented
Sharani Jambekov, a professor at the university in Grozny. "The war has wreaked havoc on their views and system
of values.
"Every
single Chechen family has lost someone in the war. Young people
see it as their duty to avenge the death of their next of
kin, and that's the main reason why many of them join Wahhabi
movements."
Umalt
Dudayev