MOSCOW: A Chechen rebel leader who vowed to disrupt the Sochi Winter Olympics is dead, Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov said Friday although Russian security services did not confirm the claim.
Doku Umarov, who styles himself the “Caucasus Emir,” was killed in a security operation, Kadyrov said in a statement published Friday on the Chechen government’s website.
“We are 99.9 percent sure of this,” Kadyrov said.
“I said before that he was no longer alive, but now we have received a recording of a conversation of so-called ‘emirs’ where they announce his death, condole with each other and discuss candidates to replace him as emir.”
Umarov, a fighter who has headed militants in Chechnya since 2006, has been the subject of numerous death reports in the past.
“We cannot confirm the death of Doku Umarov. We do not have any such information,” a source in Russian security services told the Interfax news agency.
Lawmaker and former security agency chief Nikolai Kovalyov told RIA Novosti news agency that rebels often spread false information of deaths in order to evade pursuit.
“I am sure the Chechen president has reliable information in order to make such claims. He has evidence of his death. But of course this information must be double-checked,” he added.
If proved correct, Umarov’s death would be a huge morale boost for the Russian government ahead of the Sochi Olympics.
Umarov vowed in July that his fighters would use “any means possible” to keep Putin from staging the Games.
Russia has enforced drastic security measures in and around the host city Sochi in a bid to prevent major attacks by insurgents after bombings in the southern city of Volgograd last month killed 34.
Making the claim, Kadyrov boasted that rebels would now not be capable of acting during the Olympics.
“All the talk of a threat to the Olympics in Sochi is absolutely groundless,” he said.
Umarov has been fighting to carve out a separate republic across the North Caucasus and has claimed the region around Sochi as part of his self-proclaimed ancestral land.
He was first declared killed in August 2000 during a special operation in Chechnya by Russian forces.
Doku Umarov, who styles himself the “Caucasus Emir,” was killed in a security operation, Kadyrov said in a statement published Friday on the Chechen government’s website.
“We are 99.9 percent sure of this,” Kadyrov said.
“I said before that he was no longer alive, but now we have received a recording of a conversation of so-called ‘emirs’ where they announce his death, condole with each other and discuss candidates to replace him as emir.”
Umarov, a fighter who has headed militants in Chechnya since 2006, has been the subject of numerous death reports in the past.
“We cannot confirm the death of Doku Umarov. We do not have any such information,” a source in Russian security services told the Interfax news agency.
Lawmaker and former security agency chief Nikolai Kovalyov told RIA Novosti news agency that rebels often spread false information of deaths in order to evade pursuit.
“I am sure the Chechen president has reliable information in order to make such claims. He has evidence of his death. But of course this information must be double-checked,” he added.
If proved correct, Umarov’s death would be a huge morale boost for the Russian government ahead of the Sochi Olympics.
Umarov vowed in July that his fighters would use “any means possible” to keep Putin from staging the Games.
Russia has enforced drastic security measures in and around the host city Sochi in a bid to prevent major attacks by insurgents after bombings in the southern city of Volgograd last month killed 34.
Making the claim, Kadyrov boasted that rebels would now not be capable of acting during the Olympics.
“All the talk of a threat to the Olympics in Sochi is absolutely groundless,” he said.
Umarov has been fighting to carve out a separate republic across the North Caucasus and has claimed the region around Sochi as part of his self-proclaimed ancestral land.
He was first declared killed in August 2000 during a special operation in Chechnya by Russian forces.
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