More Children Are Killed In Russia

How can 42 thousand children be killed legally? 03-09-2004

The events in North Ossetia caused a wild outburst of emotions in the Russian press. Even the blast in Moscow was not PR-ed by the Russian propaganda as much as the seizure of school in Beslan. And this is understandable: children were taken hostage. And everybody knows that children are holy.

All right. On the whole, the logic is clear and emotions are explainable. But… There are a couple of trivial questions in this regard:

What, for an example, can you call those who just kill children, and not threaten them? And what kind of punishment should be made for them?

What kind of species of mammals or predators are those who killed 42,000 Chechen children of school age, and who have been holding the survivors hostage for the past 10 years and threatening to kill them each minute?

Or Chechen schoolkids are not children? Or Chechen children do not belong to the human race? Or killing Chechen children is not a crime, but only an ‘inadequate use of force’? Or Chechen children can be legally tortured in Russian concentration camps?

Why the threat to the lives of several Russian schoolchildren raises an emergency to convene an urgent session of the UN Security Council, while murders of 42,000 (!!!) Chechen children of school age have not been making anybody in the world outraged throughout 10 years?

Why the armed group that seized the school with children and their parents in it in a town located near the front lines, from where squads of murderers and sadists get sent to kill Chechen children, are supposed to be «crossed out of the list of human race», while maniac and slaughterer of Chechen children, who killed 42,000 Chechen children of school age, - Putin and members of his camarilla, are being received in European capitals, and leaders of supposedly civilized Europe do not loathe to visit him?

Why? Maybe because Chechen children are Muslims?

-You are hypocrites and scoundrels… And you should go to one gloomy place with all of your condemnations… You don’t even have the right to even be looking towards Chechen soldiers, let alone condemning them, because you are direct accomplices in the murder of 250,000 Chechen women, children, the disabled, the pregnant, the elderly, and unborn infants killed by Putin’s sadists in the wombs of their mothers. Nevermore, forever and ever, are you or your fosterlings will be pointing to the Chechen people how to be living their lives.

Your vile and sneaky discussions about Chechen ‘Islamists and separatists’ and your rotten imitation of concern will not delude us, and you will no longer be able to separate us, because we know what you are…

Said Ibrahayev,

for Kavkaz-Center

KavKaz-Center

Makes sense?

blind can not see the truth even if it hit them on the face.
the so called "humanists" will never see it...but good try though.

Kids die on both sides.

These innocent souls, go through all that terror.

:bummer:

an old article, but shows the “justice” of russian butchers…
From AxisofLogic.com

Russia
A war that doesn’t exist: The assassination of Chechnya’s president has shown Putin that he cannot pretend the conflict is over
By Ian Traynor
May 11, 2004, 12:16

**The four Russian special forces officers opened fire on the vehicle carrying six civilians on a quiet road in southern Chechnya. They killed the driver, then realised they had netted not a carload of “terrorists”, but a couple of village teachers, a farmer, and a mother of seven children. To cover up their blunder, the Spetsnaz commandoes executed all five survivors, doused the vehicle in petrol and set it alight to pretend that it had hit a landmine.
**
Another routine atrocity in Vladimir Putin’s dirty war, a war he pretends is long over, long won since there are no political dividends in it any more. The murder of the six took place two years ago. Ten days ago in Rostov in southern Russia, the headquarters for Russia’s creaking Chechnya war machine, a court acquitted the four officers of the killings. They were just following orders.

If the acquittals scandalised Chechens, the trial itself was a rarity, only the second time in a decade of conflict in Chechnya that Russian officers had been called to judicial account for their brutality towards its civilians.

While the US, Britain and the Arab world grow increasingly outraged at the torture of Iraqi prisoners, Putin’s forces have carte blanche to ravage Chechnya on a daily basis with impunity.

The Russian leader need not concern himself with the Russian equivalent of CBS airing any footage of humiliation. No need to lean on the editors of 60 Minutes. There no longer is an equivalent. Russian TV used to be a problem for the Kremlin and Chechnya. Boris Yeltsin’s 94-96 war there withered as Russian TV bloomed, a late flowering of glasnost. Putin solved the problem by taking control of all national television.

That control also helps Putin to pretend the war is over. He rode to power almost five years ago by launching Russia’s second war in Chechnya within weeks of becoming prime minister. Last week, being inaugurated for a second term as Russian president amid Kremlin pomp, he did not once mention Chechnya by name in his big speech.

While he was speaking, Russian forces were “rounding up” another 160 men in Chechnya for the beatings and detentions that are a daily occurrence. At the same time, four Russian troops were killed in Chechnya, also a daily fixture. Running at around 30 deaths a week, plus dozens more maimed and ultimately dying, the Russian death toll now runs into the thousands.

And still Putin pretends there is no war, until a “terrorist” bomb explodes on one of the holiest days in the Russian calendar, May 9, the day that Russia marks its greatest victory, over Nazi Germany.

Yesterday’s attack, the boldest Chechen guerrilla strike since the Moscow theatre siege of October 2002, deprived Putin of his self-appointed loyal Chechen leader, Akhmad Kadyrov, and, more importantly from the military’s point of view, of General Valery Baranov, the Russian commander in Chechnya.

In Chechnya itself, there are no more prestigious targets for the guerrillas than these two. The retribution will be terrifying. And guaranteed to perpetuate the long spiral of violence in what Putin insists ad nauseum is Russia’s own war on terror.

That is the tacit deal struck between Moscow and Washington since 9/11. He gets a green light for his Chechen campaign, in return for sharing intelligence with the US and not resisting US bases in post-Soviet central Asia.

And his spin doctors constantly equate the Chechen guerrillas with al-Qaida. There are inarguably links in the Islamist international, and increasingly so as the conflict becomes more embittered and radicalised. But the parallel between Russia in Chechnya and America in Afghanistan or Iraq is also specious. Chechnya is a 200-year-old story of Russian empire and expansion, conquest and co-existence, rebellion and retribution. You can read about it in Tolstoy and Lermontov. Stalin put the entire Chechen population on cattle wagons to central Asia, killing tens of thousands, in retaliation for collaboration during the second world war.

Russia is not dispatching an expeditionary force thousands of miles overseas. It is fighting a homegrown war in its own backyard, one of the last battles of Russian colonialism. But if Putin really did win, the victory could also embolden the Kremlin to flex its muscles in the post-Soviet territories it has lost.

Complaining about EU protests at Russian human rights abuses in Chechnya recently, a Russian commentator typically described Aslan Maskhadov, the Chechen guerrilla leader, as Russia’s Bin Laden. The comparison is absurd. Maskhadov is a legitimate leader, elected president of Chechnya in 1997 in a reasonably fair election.

Had there been any Russian will to negotiate a settlement, Maskhadov would. Instead, Putin’s tactics have marginalised and radicalised him, trying to turn him into a Bin Laden of the Caucasus.

Eschewing politics, seeking a showdown and violence, the Kremlin has preferred self-fulfilling prophecy. That may be the one area where Putin has been successful. He should not be surprised to be confronting fundamentalist Islamists, black widow female suicide bombers, and a jihad.

· Ian Traynor is the Guardian’s central europe correspondent

http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/printer_7500.shtml