Rachid Nurgaliev, ministro da Defesa da Rússia, reconheceu que a situação operativa no Cáucaso do Norte se agudiza, sublinhando que as ações dos guerrilheiros se tornam mais coordenadas, antes de tudo no Daguestão, Inguchétia e Carbardino-Balkária.
O ministro anunciou que, em 2010, foram fixados “489 crimes de caráter terrorista.
Segundo ele, os dirigentes das organizações terroristas atraem ativamente para o seu lado jovens radicais, bem como utilizam de forma sábia os problemas sociais para conseguirem os seus objetivos.
No Daguestão, mais de cem agentes da ordem morreram nos confrontos com os rebeldes desde o início do ano, indicaram as autoridades dessa república.
“Oitenta e um polícias, dez membros do Serviço Federal de Segurança, doze soldados do Ministério do Interior e um colaborador dos serviços penitenciários foram mortes em operações especiais”, declarou o ministro do Interior do Daguestão à agência ITAR-TASS.
“Mais de 100 polícias foram feridos desde o início do ano em atentados e ataques”, indicou a mesma fonte.
Na véspera, a polícia daguestanesa anunciou ter liquidado onze guerrilheiros em duas operações especiais, tendo morrido dois agentes da polícia.
O Daguestão é uma das repúblicas do Cáucaso do Norte russo onde a guerrilha islâmica combate pela separação dessa região da Rússia.
Iniciadas nos anos 90 do séc. XX na Chechénia, as operações separatistas alargaram-se à Inguchétia, Daguestão, Cabardino-Balkária e Ossétia do Norte.
4 comentários:
Esqueceu-se de mencionar que o Imam Khamzat Chumakov acabou de sofrer um atentado que o deixou em estado grave (e, pelo menos para já, sem uma perna).
Note-se que este alvo não é um membro das forças de segurança mas sim uma voz muito crítica dos terroristas islâmicos, ou seja, um elemento que pode por em causa a legitimidade religiosa dos extremistas islâmicos.
Já agora, deixo aqui uns excertos de uma notícia da Itar-Tass:
War against wahhabites in Caucasus turning into fratricidal war
(...) In Dagestan, however, the war against the militants turned into a real fratricidal war: members of one and the same family often find themselves by the different sides of the barricades. (...)
Armed clashes have been going on in Dagestan since last August, when Magomedali Vagabov, the leader of the Dagestan militants, was killed. Attacks on men of the law enforcement agencies take place there almost every day. In response, they stage special operations, which include the blocking of militants and shooting in residential areas.
(...)
The shooting in the village of Komsomolskoe, Kyzyl-Yurt District, resulted in the death of three militants, two men of the special task force and Khavzrat Sharipov, head of the local municipality, (...). His brother was among the armed men, who were blocked in the house.
(...)
This is another episode in the tragic story about civil confrontation in Dagestan, which split many families already. Arsen Akhmedov, a militant, was killed during a special operation last Friday. He was the son of Abdulbasyr Akhmedov, head of the criminal police department of Derbent. Last August Dagestan was shocked by the story about Gadzhimurad Khulatayev, who organized the murder of his own father Yunus Khulatayev, deputy head of the investigation department under the office of the Interior Ministry in Dagestan.
“Relatives of officials of the local government bodies and of the republican law enforcement agencies often join extremists, which hampers their capture,” a source at the central office of the Russian Interior Ministry in the North Caucasian Federal District told the Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
(..)
The republic is on the verge of a religious war between supporters of traditional Islam and wahhabites, who are the supporters of the Saudi version of that religion.
(...)
“It is the sufistic variety of Islam that has been traditionally spread in the Northern Caucasus, but the militants profess the so-called wahhabism (salafism would be the more correct term), which is spread in Saudi Arabia and some other Middle East countries,” said Alexei Malashenko, an expert of the Moscow Carnegie Centre. “The first salafites appeared in the Northern Caucasus early in the 1990s, when the borders with the Middle East countries were opened. At present it is the wahhabites who are fighting for Islamic morality all over the Northern Caucasus with the help of violence. They attack traders in alcoholic drinks, prostitutes and fortune-tellers. They proved to be especially effective in Ingushetia, where alcoholic drinks are practically not sold, and about all the women wear kerchiefs.” (...) at present traditional Muslims show as much fervour as wahhabites in the Islamization of Dagestan. “There are some 2,500 mosques in Dagestan today – more, than in the pre-revolutionary times,” Urazayev said. “Dagestan TV broadcasts religious programmes at least four hours a day. Clergymen of traditional Islam also demand a ban on the marketing of alcoholic drinks and on prostitution. The difference is that they use legal methods. (...)
http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=15491355&PageNum=0
Caro Pippo, não consigo noticiar todos os ataques no Cáucaso do Norte, são vários todos os dias.
Sem dúvida! Nem eu lhe pedi isso.
Mas este é um ataque muito importante porque visou um personagem que pode combater eficazmente a "mensagem" da guerrilha.
Enviar um comentário