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Neilikka
09-26-2008, 03:56 PM
MOSCOW — Ruslan Yamadayev, a former State Duma deputy and a member of a Chechen clan that challenged President Ramzan Kadyrov’s authority, was gunned down in central Moscow late Wednesday.
An unidentified attacker walked up and fired a pistol several times into Yamadayev’s Mercedes S500 after Yamadayev stopped for a red light at 10 Smolenskaya Naberezhnaya, near the White House, Interior Ministry spokesman Valery Gribakin said in televised remarks.
Yamadayev died on the spot, and his passenger, former military commander for Chechnya Sergei Kizyun, was seriously injured, Gribakin said.
Channel One television showed Yamadayev, wearing a green jacket and white shirt, sitting sprawled out in the driver’s seat. The channel said the car belonged to his brother, Sulim, former commander of the special commando battalion Vostok.
The attacker fled in a foreign-made car, Gribakin said. Police were combing the city for an Audi-80 sedan Wednesday night, RIA-Novosti reported, citing sources in the investigation team.
Ten 9-mm bullets fired from automatic weapons were retrieved at the site of the attack, RIA-Novosti said.
Yamadayev, 47, and his brothers Sulim and Badrudi headed a powerful clan that had a falling out with Kadyrov after enjoying warm relations with Kadyrov’s father, assassinated Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov.
A source in the Chechen administration said Kadyrov was upset to learn about Yamadayev’s death.
“You know, rumors will start now that he might be involved,” the official said by telephone, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.
Like the Kadyrovs, Yamadayev and his brothers initially supported Chechnya’s independence from Russia in the 1990s. They fought against federal troops during the first Chechen war but switched sides during the second military campaign and supported Kremlin efforts to end Chechnya’s de facto independence.
With Akhmad Kadyrov, the Yamadayevs arranged for their stronghold — the Chechen city of Gudermes — to be taken over by federal troops without a fight. In return, a grateful Kremlin allowed the Yamadayevs to use their fighters to form Vostok under the auspices of the Defense Ministry. Ruslan and Sulim Yamadayev were awarded Hero of Russia medals for their fight against Chechen rebels.
Sulim Yamadayev was made commander of Vostok, while Ruslan was elected to the State Duma on the pro-Kremlin United Russia ticket in 2003. He was not re-elected in December 2007 in what insiders said was a sign that Chechen authorities no longer wanted him to occupy the high-profile post.
He continued to live in Moscow with Sulim Yamadayev, the Chechen official said.
The Yamadayevs were believed to be the only political and military force in Chechnya capable of acting independently of Kadyrov, who became president in February 2007. Yamadayev’s death further cements Kadyrov’s grip on Chechnya, said Sergei Markedonov, a Caucasus expert at the Institute of Political and Military Analysis.
A standoff between the two clans culminated in April when a Vostok convoy failed to yield to Kadyrov’s motorcade. A furious Kadyrov ordered a crackdown on the Yamadayevs.
Chechen prosecutors opened an investigation into Sulim Yamadayev on murder charges, and he was subsequently put on a wanted list. Kadyrov’s press service distributed a flurry of press releases accusing the brothers of organizing extrajudicial killings, torture, extortions and kidnapping. Among the allegations, the brothers were accused of raiding a St. Petersburg company owned by a Chechen businessman and then kidnapping his relatives.
“They had a lot of enemies,” the Chechen official said.
However, Kadyrov’s efforts to undercut the clan did not stop Sulim Yamadayev from commanding the Vostok battalion during Russia’s military operation to push Georgian troops out of South Ossetia in early August, and he granted interviews to the Russian press in South Ossetia.
Shortly after the South Ossetia conflict, Sulim Yamadayev was fired from Vostok, but he also was removed from the Chechen wanted list.

The St.Petersburg Times

Hoopy
09-26-2008, 04:10 PM
So have they marked it down as a suicide or a hunting accident?

snow_flake
09-26-2008, 04:15 PM
Definately suicide - he went under a falling frigde:becky:

Lucker
09-26-2008, 04:21 PM
This is a corker of a story and the most likely explanation is that Sulim was the target and not his brother --- it was Sulim's car that was being driven .
You can take your pick as to who shot him
FSB
FSB faction on behalf of Kadyrov
Kadyrov's own Police
A free lance contract killer employed by any of the above .

I do not believe it was the FSB working under State orders . Such a blatant assassination in the middle of Moscow would have been madness and political suicide .Pointless .
The prime suspect must be Kadyrov but , if true , I cannot imagine Russia being at all happy .
Wrong place , Wrong time etc
But as I have said elsewhere , Kadyrov is as mad as a hatter and it is only a matter of time before he upsets Russia too far and/or grows to greedy --- wants more oil revenue .
This story is set to run .

brown-raider
09-26-2008, 05:44 PM
So have they marked it down as a suicide or a hunting accident?:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

Neilikka
09-27-2008, 05:38 AM
Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov said Thursday that the murder of Ruslan Yamadayev, a former State Duma deputy and a member of a Chechen clan that challenged Kadyrov's authority, was most likely linked to a blood feud.

In his first public comments on the murder of Yamadayev, who was gunned down in central Moscow late Wednesday, Kadyrov told reporters in Grozny that he is "80 to 90 percent certain that the murder could be motivated by a blood feud," Interfax reported.

An unidentified attacker walked up and fired a pistol several times into Yamadayev's Mercedes S500 after Yamadayev stopped for a red light Wednesday evening on Smolenskaya Naberezhnaya, authorities said.

Yamadayev, 47, and his brothers headed a clan that had a falling out with Kadyrov after enjoying warm relations with Kadyrov's father, assassinated Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov.

Kadyrov has accused Yamdayev's younger brother, Sulim, the former head of Vostok, the Defense Ministry's special commando battalion in Chechnya, of kidnapping and murder.

He suggested Thursday that Yamadayev may have been killed by relatives of Yamadayev's purported victims.

Kadyrov said he regretted Yamadayev's death. "If Ruslan Yamadayev was guilty of something, he should have been tried in court," he said.

Yamadayev's brother, Sulim, speaking at the funeral, accused Kadyrov of killing Ruslan and vowed to take revenge, Reuters reported.

Kadyrov's spokesman, Lyoma Gudayev, suggested Thursday that the assassination was an attempt to destabilize the situation in Chechnya, which Kadyrov -- with the Kremlin's backing -- has ruled with an iron fist.

"Forces that want to foment tensions in Chechnya could be interested in killing Yamadayev in such audacious fashion," Gudayev said, Interfax reported.

The main investigative department with the Investigative Committee is handling the case because of the "particular brazenness" of the crime and its "resonance," committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said Thursday, Interfax reported.

Like Kadyrov, the Yamadayevs are former Chechen separatists who fought federal forces before switching sides during the second Chechen war. And like Kadyrov, they were lavishly rewarded by the Kremlin with posts in the government and military.

But they became the target of a legal crackdown by Kadyrov in what many analysts see as an attempt to completely consolidate his power in the republic.

Several senior State Duma deputies who worked with Yamadayev when he was a lawmaker from 2003 to 2007 said his murder was linked either to his business or to clan warfare in Chechnya.

Kommersant suggested Thursday that the killer may have mistaken Ruslan Yamadayev for his brother Sulim, the Yamadayev for whom Kadyrov has reserved his harshest public words.

The two brothers were using the same car, which was registered to a relative of theirs living in Moscow, Kommersant said.

beezneesman
09-27-2008, 10:40 AM
You're nobody if you don't have an armoured limo. A Merc S-class with no armour - talk about '...all fur coat and no knickers' as we say oop North