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Sep 19th, 2004 01:28 AM | ||
Stabby |
Is anyone surprised by this? I'm shocked he was even convicted to begin with, after the military and the media made him out to be virtually a HERO. Quote:
The direction Russia is currently going is very troubling. |
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Sep 19th, 2004 12:38 AM | ||
AChimp | Anyone taking bets that it'll be approved just to send a big fuck you to the Chechens? | |
Sep 19th, 2004 12:23 AM | ||
Zhukov |
I lost the link. I'll get it agian if you really want me too. It's from BBC world news. The reason for his proposed release is good behavior in jail, like participating in sports events. Apparently the governor of the region liked him, he supported Budanov in the past. It still has to be finalised by Putin, though. |
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Sep 19th, 2004 12:20 AM | ||
Zhukov |
Budanov, murderer of Chechen girl, pardoned Chechnya murderer pardoned Budanov was convicted last year. A Russian ex-colonel who was sentenced to 10 years in jail for murdering a Chechen girl has been pardoned by a regional amnesty commission. Yuri Budanov was the first Russian officer to be prosecuted for a crime against a civilian in Chechnya. A final decision on whether to approve the pardon must be made by President Vladimir Putin. Observers say the recommendation that Budanov be freed will send shockwaves through the Chechen community. The Budanov case has been widely seen as a test of Moscow's determination to crack down on human rights abuses by Russian troops in Chechnya. Human rights groups have documented thousands of cases of alleged abuses in Chechnya, but convictions are rare. BUDANOV TIMELINE Mar 2000: Elsa Kungayeva is killed Dec 2002: Budanov acquitted on grounds of insanity Feb 2003: Supreme Court orders re-trial July 2003: Budanov convicted Oct 2003: Supreme Court upholds conviction The BBC's regional analyst, Stephen Dalziel, says Chechens believe the recent hostage-taking in a Russian school in Beslan could lead to a renewed crack-down in Chechnya. If Mr Putin grants a pardon to Budanov, Chechens will see this as giving the Russian army carte blanche to behave as it wishes in the republic, our correspondent adds. 'Innocent girl' Elsa Kungayeva, 18, was taken from her home to a Russian military barracks in March 2000. While in custody, she was strangled. The colonel admitted in court to killing her in a fit of rage during interrogation, because he was convinced she was a Chechen rebel sniper. But he argued he was temporarily insane at the time of the crime. He was acquitted in a military court in 2002, but the decision was later overturned, and a fresh trial last year resulted in a guilty verdict. "Whether in jail or freed, Budanov will remain a person who has committed a grave crime, which took the life of an innocent girl," Taus Dzhabrailov, the head of Chechnya's pro-Moscow proxy parliament, told Russian news agency Interfax. |