<DIV>Just great. Chechen clan war. The Chechenization of the conflict is complete!</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Chechen leader pledges war on rebels' families<BR>By Oliver Bullough<BR><BR>MOSCOW, June 9 (Reuters) - Ramzan Kadyrov, the son of Chechnya's slain<BR>pro-Moscow president, pledged on Wednesday to target rebels' families in a<BR>new hardline attempt to end more than a decade of conflict with separatists.<BR><BR>Rights groups say the thousands-strong militia under Kadyrov's control<BR>already follows such a policy. But his overt voicing of the idea suggested<BR>he saw Russian policies as ineffective in crushing the guerrillas.<BR><BR>Ramzan's father, Akhmad Kadyrov, died in a bomb attack a month ago, and the<BR>burly 27-year-old implicitly referred to the Chechen president's death in<BR>his comments.<BR><BR>"We must not forget that we are Chechens, that they can kill our relatives,<BR>our fathers and brothers, but we cannot kill theirs," he told NTV television.<BR><BR>"Now, we will punish relatives who help the bandits while saying they are<BR>just helping their
relatives."<BR><BR>He said that if legislation did not permit such a practice, "we will ask<BR>the State Duma (lower house of parliament) to pass such a law, otherwise<BR>the war will never end."<BR><BR>Kadyrov denies men under his command commit excesses. Authorities in Moscow<BR>consider his activities to be within the competence of Chechnya's devolved<BR>government and offer no comment on them.<BR><BR>The Kremlin, which sent troops into Chechnya for a second time in 1999,<BR>says the situation is normalising in the mountainous region on Russia's<BR>southern flank.<BR><BR>But police and troops die in nearly daily attacks and Akhmad Kadyrov's<BR>death has left Russian President Vladimir Putin without any central figure<BR>to rely on. A presidential election is set for the region in August.<BR><BR>According to the Russian SNO human rights group, Russian forces have used<BR>mass air strikes against rebels hiding in the mountains this week, while<BR>conducting "sweep operations" to
find fighters and their supporters in<BR>villages.<BR><BR>Rights groups denounce the "sweeps," in which young men are often rounded<BR>up after house-to-house searches.<BR><BR>Ramzan Kadyrov, elevated to deputy prime minister of Chechnya after his<BR>father's death, said this week that an amnesty to encourage rebels to<BR>surrender should be wound up.<BR><BR>"If you turn down this opportunity, that is your decision, and it leaves us<BR>no choice but to destroy you," he said.<BR><BR>According to rights groups, Ramzan's troops -- made up almost entirely of<BR>former rebels -- commit widespread abuses in their quest to eliminate the<BR>separatists, who ruled a de facto independent Chechnya between 1996 and 1999.<BR><BR>********<BR><BR>#2<BR>Dead Chechen leader's son backs minister in poll<BR>By Oliver Bullough<BR><BR>MOSCOW, June 10 (Reuters) - The son of the slain head of Russia's Chechnya<BR>province backed his father's interior minister to lead the region on<BR>Thursday, a step
almost certain to boost the minister to the presidency in<BR>an August election.<BR><BR>Ramzan Kadyrov, whose father Akhmad died in a bombing carried out by<BR>separatists in May, controls a thousands-strong and widely feared militia.<BR>Any candidate without his support would have trouble winning the August 29<BR>poll.<BR><BR>Kadyrov junior endorsed local interior minister Alu Alkhanov, who directs<BR>local police helping Russian troops in their decade-old campaign to crush<BR>separatists.<BR><BR>The attack on Akhmad Kadyrov dealt a major blow to President Vladimir<BR>Putin, who relied on the rebel-turned-loyalist to battle his former comrades.<BR><BR>"(Akhmad) Kadyrov always hoped that Alkhanov would restore order in<BR>Chechnya," Ramzan told Russian state television.<BR><BR>"Because he is in charge of police we think he will restore order and is a<BR>worthy candidate."<BR><BR>Television showed Chechen men wearing skullcaps and tall Caucasus sheepskin<BR>hats gathering at
Kadyrov's sprawling house in Tsenteroi, his home village<BR>southeast of the regional capital Grozny.<BR><BR>A regional government spokesman said the meeting grouped religious and<BR>political leaders from across Chechnya to decide who they would back in the<BR>elections.<BR><BR>Putin has pledged the bombing will not derail his plan to restore peace by<BR>offering the region autonomy. But officials have been casting around for a<BR>leader with the authority to bring the province back within Moscow's fold.<BR><BR>The government has near-total control of the state apparatus in Chechnya<BR>and in last year's presidential poll all main rivals to Kadyrov were either<BR>sidelined or pulled out. A candidate with government backing would thus<BR>have a big advantage.<BR><BR>The Kremlin has yet to make its backing clear, but state-owned federal<BR>television channels have started to cover Alkhanov more than other<BR>Chechens, and praised his career in the police and his opposition to
the<BR>separatists on Thursday.<BR><BR>Separatists in Chechnya briefly won de facto independence when they pushed<BR>Russian forces out in 1996 but were chased out when Moscow dispatched its<BR>troops to the region for the second time since the collapse of Soviet rule.<BR><BR>The Kremlin refuses to negotiate with separatists and troops and police die<BR>in nearly daily rebel attacks. A statement from the unified command<BR>reported clashes on Thursday in Grozny and the mountains to the south.<BR></DIV><p>
                <hr size=1><font face=arial size=-1>Do you Yahoo!?<br>Friends. Fun. <a href="http://messenger.yahoo.com/">Try the all-new Yahoo! Messenger</a>