Chechnya-Ingushetia was a former Soviet republic until the breakup of the USSR in the mid-90s - it has not gone well for the region and the Chechyn nationalists remain an aggeressive separatist movement.
Just a reminder we aren't the only one with problems...
Richard's $.02
Suicide Bombing in Russia
Michael Schwirtz, NYT, 17 Aug 2009
At least 20 people were killed, and dozens were wounded in a suicide truck bombing at a police headquarters in Russia’s tumultuous North Caucasus region on Monday, according to government officials, the latest episode in a spate of violence to hit the area in recent weeks.
The blast hit the police headquarters in
Nazran, the capital of Ingushetia, around 9 a.m. local time as many police officials were arriving at work.
The attack seemed to further undermine the authority of Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, Ingushetia’s populist president who came to power last October vowing a softer approach in dealing with rebel violence than Ramzan Kadyrov, the president of neighboring Chechnya.
It was the bloodiest single attack to hit Ingushetia in some time, though
violence against police and government officials in this and other North Caucasus republics occurs almost daily. Mr. Yevkurov himself announced last week that he would soon return to work after he was seriously wounded in a suicide attack on his convoy in June. Ingushetia’s construction minister, Ruslan Amirkhanov, was assassinated in his office last week.
Russian television coverage of Monday’s attack showed rescue workers picking through a large swath of smoldering rubble.
“It was a suicide bomber,” said Kaloi Akhilgov, the spokesman for Mr. Yevkurov. “He rammed the gate of the police headquarters, drove into the courtyard and blew himself up.”
The blast occurred in a heavily populated area, not far from several banks and government buildings. A six-storey residential building nearby was also heavily damaged. Some 60 people were injured, the prosecutor general’s office said. Mr. Akhilgov said 10 of the injured were children.
A spokeswoman for the central hospital in Nazran said dozens of victims had arrived with severe burns and broken bones. The investigative wing of the prosecutor general’s office put the death toll at 20 and said it was expected to rise.
In response to the bombing,
President Dmitri A. Medvedev ordered Russia’s interior minister to increase the number of police forces in Ingushetia.
That appears to be a step back from the more peaceful strategy for dealing with Ingushetia’s militant threat Mr. Yevkurov originally advocated upon becoming president. A former intelligence officer and a devout Muslim, Mr. Yevkurov reached out to opposition leaders as well as militant commanders in an attempt to ease the bubbling tensions in Ingushetia.
But the
violence has continued, fueled in part by the arrival of militants fleeing Mr. Kadyrov’s brutal counterinsurgency in Chechnya, where a decade and a half of internecine warfare has ground down the rebel movement to a paltry, though potent, few.
The bombing on Monday comes just days after separate attacks in neighboring Chechnya and Dagestan, killed over 20 people, including seven female employees of a sauna in Dagestan.
In a sign that Mr. Yevkurov’s experiment in reconciliation has failed, Mr. Kadyrov has sent Chechen commanders to Ingushetia to conduct counterterrorism operations there.
“We have a common enemy and a common task to eliminate it,” Mr. Kadyrov said in a statement on his Web site on Monday. “Together with President Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, we will realize this mission and do everything necessary to liquidate the remaining militants. The leadership of this country supports us.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/18/wo...er=rss&emc=rss