Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Salman Raduyev


In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  Salman Raduyev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Salman Raduyev (or Raduev; Russian: Салма́н Раду́ев; February 13, 1967–December 14, 2002) was a rogue Chechen warlord.
Raduyev was tried on multiple murder charges and, in December of 2001, was sentenced to life in prison.
On December 14, 2002, Salman Raduyev died in a penal colony from internal bleeding.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Salman_Raduyev   (472 words)

  
 Chechnya - Salman Raduyev
Raduyev is the poster boy for "Chechen extreme" and the son-in-law of the late Dudayev.
Raduyev broke through the Russian perimeter with his fighters and 100 of the hostages and made a successful run for the Chechen town of Pervomaiskaya.
Raduyev and his boys are the most radical of the Chechen separatists and don't recognize the legitimacy of Maskhadov's government.
www.comebackalive.com /df/dplaces/chechnya/player5.htm   (354 words)

  
 Salman Raduyev Information
Salman Raduyev (or Raduev, Russian: Салман Радуев; February 13, 1967 — December 14, 2002) was a rogue Chechen warlord.
Raduyev was one of the best known of the rebel field commanders, commanding strategically important Gudermes district.
On December 14, 2002, Salman Raduyev died in a penal colony.
www.bookrags.com /Salman_Raduyev   (657 words)

  
 Leader of terrorist group dies in prison - theage.com.au
Salman Raduyev, a Chechen terrorist who was part of a guerrilla team that seized a Russian hospital with at least 2000 hostages inside, has died in prison.
Raduyev, 35, right, died of an internal haemorrhage in Perm, but Russian officials did not say what caused the bleeding, except to insist that his death was from natural causes.
Raduyev, known for his support of an Islamic revolution in Chechnya, was captured by Russian troops in March, 2000, for the 1995 hospital siege.
www.theage.com.au /articles/2002/12/16/1039656340183.html   (165 words)

  
 Газета.Ru - Raduyev Trial Enters Final Stage
Salman Raduyev is also believed to be behind the abduction of policemen from a special force regiment from the Penza Region in 1996 and of masterminding a terrorist attack at the train station in the town of Pyatigorsk in April 1997.
Salman Raduyev’s and Turpal Ali-Atgeriyev’s defence lawyers were expected to deliver their final statements on Thursday, however, they asked for a delay on the grounds that they needed more time for preparation.
Raduyev, his lawyer claims, did everything in his power to prevent unlawful actions by Chechen fighters during the attack on Kizlyar in January 1996, and that the person who is really guilt for the deaths of Kizlyar civilians and policemen is another rebel commander – Khunker Israpilov.
www.gazeta.ru /2001/12/14/RaduyevTrial.shtml   (776 words)

  
 CNN.com - Chechen rebel leader jailed - December 25, 2001
Raduyev was the only prominent rebel commander to be arrested and brought to trial since the Russian armed forces entered the breakaway region seven years ago.
Raduyev, who was severely wounded several times, has said repeatedly that he was merely taking orders from late rebel president Dzhokhar Dudayev when he led the Kizlyar raid.
Raduyev and Atgeriyev were found not guilty on the counts of organizing and participating in illegal armed formations -- the Russian term for rebel bands.
edition.cnn.com /2001/WORLD/europe/12/25/raduyev.trial/index.html   (546 words)

  
 The St. Petersburg Times - News - Raduyev Pleads Not Guilty at Trial Opening
Raduyev and three alleged accomplices are on trial for a hostage-taking raid on a Dagestani hospital in 1996 that left 78 people dead.
Raduyev said the raid was ordered by the first Chechen president, Dzhok har Dudayev, and was conceived not as military operation but as a political and propagandist move to attract the world's attention to the conflict in Chechnya.
However, Raduyev said, despite all the accords on safe passage reached with Dagestani authorities, the rebel convoy was blocked by Russian troops near the village of Pervomaiskoye on the Dagestani-Chechen border.
www.sptimes.ru /index.php?action_id=2&story_id=5924   (942 words)

  
 Caucasus Foundation
Raduyev's wife and children: Zelimkhan(6) and Cauhar(5) were in hopes thru the Court that Raduyev may be saved from the Russian prison.
Salman's sister called me Yesterday morning and told me that she has a telegram from Salman whom asks us to come to the prison by mid December.
Salman Raduyev was not the type of person the Russians thought of.
kafkas.org.tr /english/ajans/2002/aralik/17.12.2002_Salman_Raduyeva.htm   (702 words)

  
 The St. Petersburg Times - News - Chechen Warlord Dies in Prison in Perm
Raduyev died in the Perm region, where he was confined to a high-security hard labor camp, a ministry spokesperson said.
Raduyev, who had enjoyed considerable notoriety in Russia but was less respected in Chechnya, was born in 1967, making him either 34 or 35 when he died.
The charges against Raduyev, who was arrested in March 2000, focused on a January 1996 raid on the town of Kizlyar, where he and other rebels took hundreds of hostages at a local hospital.
www.sptimes.ru /index.php?action_id=2&story_id=8836   (505 words)

  
 BBC NEWS | Europe | Chechen warlord dies in jail
Raduyev was sentenced to life imprisonment for multiple murders and terrorism, in December, 2001.
Raduyev said he was taking orders from his father-in-law, the late Chechen President, Dzhokhar Dudayev, who was killed by a Russian missile in 1996.
In March, 1996, Raduyev was shot in the head in an assassination attempt and reported dead.
news.bbc.co.uk /2/hi/europe/2577065.stm   (375 words)

  
 CNN.com - Rebel leader accuses Russian army - November 19, 2001
Salman Raduyev, the most prominent Chechen rebel to be arrested and put on trial to date, told the court in the southern Russian republic of Dagestan on Monday that the Russian military left behind scores of weapons and artillery in Chechnya in the early 1990s after the small republic first declared its sovereignty.
Raduyev has testified that he was only following orders from Dudayev when he led a raid on the southern town of Kizlyar in 1996.
Raduyev also faces charges in connection with an explosion in southern Russia in 1997 and taking policemen hostage the year before.
archives.cnn.com /2001/WORLD/europe/11/19/chechnya.raduyev   (418 words)

  
 [CTRL] NYTimes.com Article: Salman Raduyev, Convicted Chechen Warlord,
Salman Raduyev died early Saturday in a high security camp in the Perm region, about 750 miles east of Moscow, ministry and prison officials said.
In August, Raduyev's accomplice in the 1996 raid, Turpal-Ali Atgeriyev, died in a prison hospital in the Ural mountain city of Yekaterinburg.
During his trial, Raduyev sat in a cage, wearing a baseball cap and large aviator sunglasses that the Russian media reported was to hide significant plastic surgery.
www.mail-archive.com /ctrl@listserv.aol.com/msg100182.html   (687 words)

  
 Top Chechen guerilla defiant at start of trial -DAWN - International; November 16, 2001
Salman Raduyev became one of Moscow’s most wanted fugitives after leading a bloody hostage-taking raid into the neighbouring Dagestan province in 1996 during the first of two wars in Chechnya.
Raduyev and three alleged accomplices were brought to court in Dagestan’s capital Makhachkala in an armoured convoy and the street in front of the courthouse was shut by armed police.
Raduyev identified himself to the court, responding when asked to state his job: “Commander of the northeast sector of the armed forces of the Chechen Republic Ichkeriya,” using the pro-independence fighters’ name for the province.
www.dawn.com /2001/11/16/int9.htm   (357 words)

  
 News
Raduyev, who defied the Russian army after a hostage-taking raid in the southern region of Dagestan in January, said Dudayev was in a "safe place" but in grave condition.
Raduyev said Dudayev's condition was so bad that it might be worse than that of General Anatoly Romanov, Russia's former top commander in Chechnya, who is in a deep coma in hospital after his car was blown up in the regional capital Grozny in October.
Raduyev's "Lone Wolf" group of rebels took hundreds of hostages in the southern Russian town of Kizlyar in January and then, after a siege of over a week, escaped with some of the hostages from the nearby village of Pervomaiskoye.
www.christusrex.org /www2/news-old/6-96/ew7-19-96.html   (2994 words)

  
 CNN - Chechen rebel leader killed - March 6, 1996
Raduyev, 28, died in a hospital in Urus-Martan, a town southwest of Grozny, of injuries received when he was shot and wounded in the head in an attack, Interfax quoted Chechen interior ministry officials as saying.
Raduyev, a bearded fanatical Chechen commander, led a group of rebels on a hostage-taking raid in southern Russia in January.
Raduyev became one of Russia's most wanted men after a dramatic hostage-seizing raid in southern Russia in January.
www.cnn.com /WORLD/9603/raduyev_dead/index.html   (557 words)

  
 After Losses, Russia Seizes Chechen Warlord
Raduyev is not nearly as important a leader as the rebel chief known as Khattab or as Shamil Basayev, who lost part of a leg but managed to elude Russian forces around Grozny, the Chechen capital.
Raduyev, 33, is a relative of Dzhokar Dudayev, the leader of the Chechen republic who was killed during Chechnya's earlier effort to secede, which ended with a defeat for Russian troops but without independence.
Raduyev had been arrested without a fight near the town of Novogroznensky and that his personal guards had been unaware of his whereabouts until it was announced by Mr.
partners.nytimes.com /library/world/europe/031400russia-chechnya.html   (1051 words)

  
 Rebel's capture boosts Russian morale
ORT television showed footage of Raduyev, who has been one of Russia's most wanted men since a bloody hostage-taking raid in 1996, clean-shaven in a dark shirt, avoiding the gaze of an investigator and calmly answering questions about his identity.
Raduyev, known for his belligerent anti-Russian rhetoric, is the first top Chechen commander to fall into Moscow's hands.
Raduyev has previously claimed responsibility for both the bombings and the 1998 assassination attempt on Shevardnadze.
www.iol.co.za /general/avant_newsview.php?click_id=3&art_id=qw952972141864B262&set_id=6   (763 words)

  
 CNN.com - Rebel Chechen leader on trial - November 15, 2001
Raduyev, the most prominent Chechen separatist leader to be arrested and tried so far, also faces charges of banditry, hostage-taking, and the organisation of murders and illegal armed formations.
Raduyev is alleged to have taken part in an attack on the southern town of Kizlyar in 1996, when hundreds of hostages were taken at a local hospital.
Raduyev also faces charges in connection with an explosion in southern Russia in 1997 and taking police officers hostage in 1996.
edition.cnn.com /2001/WORLD/europe/11/15/chechnya.court/index.html   (497 words)

  
 Chechen warlord dies in Russian jail -DAWN - International; December 16, 2002
Salman Raduyev, 35, was a maverick best known for a bloody hostage-taking raid in the first Chechen war, in 1994-96, as leader of the “Lone Wolf” band.
Raduyev was known for his belligerent Islamist rhetoric, bravado and a bushy red beard, and his capture in March 2000 was portrayed as a major victory for Moscow in the early stages of its second campaign to defeat Chechen separatists.
Raduyev’s face, scarred by the numerous attempts on his life, was covered by a beard and sunglasses.
www.dawn.com /2002/12/16/int8.htm   (430 words)

  
 Chechen rebel leader sentenced to life
Raduyev led the January 1996 raid on the southern Russian town of Kizlyar in which 78 people were killed.
Raduyev, who was wounded several times, has said he only obeyed orders from late rebel leader Dzhokhar Dudayev during the Kizlyar raid.
Raduyev and Atgeriyev were found not guilty on counts of organizing and participating in illegal armed formations -- the Russian legal term for rebel bands.
lang.sbsun.com /socal/terrorist/1201/26/terror06.asp   (306 words)

  
 ¥181/03/News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
MOSCOW - Chechen field commander Salman Raduyev, who rose from the dead last week to pledge a campaign of terror against Russia, has left some observers unconvinced, while others point to his statements as a sign of a dangerous split within the Chechen leadership.
Raduyev, who led the Kizlyar-Pervomaiskoye hos tage raid in southern Russia earlier this year, was thought to have been killed last March.
He cited as proof Raduyev's recent statements that the peace agreement reached in May was not binding on him, and a subsequent disavowal of Raduyev's statement from Movladi Udugov, the rebels' foreign minister.
www.friends-partners.org /partners/spbweb/times/181-182/chechen.html   (589 words)

  
 Chechen warlord captured
The arrest of Salman Raduyev was such a coup for the authorities that Vladimir Putin, the acting president, announced the news of his seizure in person.
Raduyev, a loose cannon even by the wild standards of Chechnya, is one of the top "terrorists and bandits" that Russia claims are the targets of its military offensive but, so far, the only one to be tracked down and detained.
We hope this is just the beginning." Raduyev was paraded on television in Russian custody yesterday without his trademark wispy beard and dark glasses, the injuries inflicted on his face by a sniper's bullet in the 1994-6 war and an artificial eye and nose visible for the first time.
www.telegraph.co.uk /htmlContent.jhtml?html=/archive/2000/03/14/wchec14.html   (381 words)

  
 The Scotsman - Chechen guerrilla leader gets life for Dagestan siege
SALMAN Raduyev, the most prominent Chechen guerrilla leader ever captured by Russian forces, was sentenced to life imprisonment by a Russian court yesterday.
Raduyev became one of Russia’s most wanted men after leading a raid on the Dagestani town of Kizlyar in 1996, during the first of two wars in the rebel Russian republic.
Raduyev had long ceased to be a leading figure in the Chechen rebel movement by the time of his capture, and played no role in the second Chechen war which began in October 1999.
thescotsman.scotsman.com /index.cfm?id=1726922001   (700 words)

  
 Газета.Ru - Lawmaker Calls for Public Execution of Raduyev
The notorious separatist leader Raduyev and three of his accomplices stand accused of killing 78 people in an armed raid on the Dagestani settlements of Kizlyar and Pervomaiskoye in January 1996.
At the time Raduyev was the leader of the army named after the first president of the breakaway and unrecognised Chechen Republic of Ichkeria.
It seems somewhat unlikely that Salman Raduyev will be sentenced to death, since in 1996 Russia imposed a moratorium on the death penalty in order to meet criteria for membership to the Council of Europe.
www.gazeta.ru /2001/12/10/LawmakerCall.shtml   (653 words)

  
 The Globe and Mail: printer-friendly page
Raduyev stemmed from a January 1996 raid on the southern Russian town of Kizlyar in which 78 people were killed.
Raduyev maintained he was acting on orders from the late rebel President Dzhokhar Dudayev when he led the raid at the end of the first Chechen war.
Raduyev sat in a cage, wearing a baseball cap and aviator sunglasses and often spoke out in his defence.
www.theglobeandmail.com /servlet/RTGAMArticleHTMLTemplate?tf=tgam/realtime/fullstory_print.html&cf=tgam/realtime/config-neutral&articleDate=20021215&slug=wwarlor&date=20021215&archive=RTGAM&site=Front   (268 words)

  
 BBC News | EUROPE | Russia tries Chechen warlord
The trial of a Chechen warlord, Salman Raduyev, has opened in the southern Russian town of Makhachkala.
Raduyev led an armed raid on the town of Kizlyar nearly six years ago which left more than 70 people dead.
Salman Raduyev looked relaxed as he was led into court.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/world/europe/1657792.stm   (257 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.