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Chechen Women Fighters Ready to Die in Moscow Theater

"The Russian have drowned our country in the blood of our sons," said Chechen women fighters

MOSCOW, October 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Movsar Barayev, leader of Chechen fighters taking more than 700 people hostage inside a Moscow theater, said Thursday, October 24 that his Mujahideen, including 20 widows of Chechen soldiers, came to Moscow to fight and die on enemy land.

"If [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and his gang want to preserve the lives of his citizens, then they will stop war and will remove their forces from Chechnya," Barayev, commander of the Islamic Regiment of Special Task Force, stressed in a phone interview with Kavkaz Center.

"The only possible way to save the lives of more than a thousand people is the curtailment of the carnage of Chechen people, the end to war and withdrawal of invaders from the territory of the independent Chechen state," he said.

He asserted that the mined building will be bombed and all will be killed, if an attempt to storm the building is undertaken.

"Here are more than one thousand people. No one will leave alive and will be killed along with us, if there will be an attempt of assault," stressed Barayev.

In a televised statement aired by Al-Jazeera TV channel, one of the Chechen women fighters, dressed in black, vowed to sacrifice their lives in defense of their homeland Chechnya.

"Every people have the right to self-determination. Russia has stripped us of this right. We are here to claim this right which was given to us, like all peoples of the globe, by God Almighty," she said.

"The Russian have drowned our country in the blood of our sons," said the Chechen woman fighter.

She accused Russian forces of "killing women, children and elders in Chechnya."

"We do not care where to die and that is why we came here to die," she said, asserting that if they die they will take along with them "hundreds of infidels."

"Even if we get killed, other brothers and sisters will come along with the same readiness to sacrifice their lives," the Chechen woman said.

She accused Russian forces of perpetrating all forms of terrorism against the Chechen people, branding Russia as terrorism personified.

"We are ready to defend our lands with self-sacrifice," she averred.

In a similar televised statement, also broadcast by Al-Jazeera, one of the Chechen fighters said they came to Moscow to "stop the war or die as martyrs."

He asserted that the operation was ordered by the "supreme military ruler of Chechnya."

"Each and every one of us is ready to sacrifice his life for God and in defense of Chechnya," he stressed.

"We are yearning to die more than you are seeking to live," averred the Chechen fighter.

A Barayev's assistant told Kavkaz Center that 8 people - three remaining children and five women, were released at about 11 am Moscow local time.

He asserted that preparations were underway to set free 30 foreigners and warned the Russian command not to shoot the released hostages.

He also said that Barayev invited the ambassadors of foreign states to confirm the identities of the held people who might be foreign citizens.

Commenting on reports of three blasts, he said that the explosion took place indeed inside the building of the House of Culture.

A grenade was thrown by the Mujahideen into one of the empty rooms of the building for preventive measures, he said.

There are no casualties, asserted Barayev's assistant .

He also said that at approximately 6 o'clock in the morning one of the militiamen was killed when approaching the central entrance of the House of Culture disguised as a drunken person and asked to enter.

After several warnings, the Mujahideen shot dead the militiaman.

Contacting Kavkaz Center at approximately 4 am Moscow time, Barayev's assistant said that a young woman entered into the building of House of Culture, although she was warned not to enter.

In spite of warning, the young woman impudently entered into the hall, declaring, "And what can you do to me?…". Mujahideen warned her again that she must leave the building immediately.

However, the woman did not react to the words of soldiers.

Having information about the tactics of FSB (the Russian Federal Security Service), Mujahideen understood that the woman entered for the purpose of collecting information.

Considering the seriousness of the prevailing situation, it was decided to shoot the young woman.

Stop your war on the Chechens; withdraw your forces from our land

Meanwhile, two young Russian women managed to escape Thursday evening from the theater, one of whom was wounded as they fled, an FSB security official told Agence France-Presse (AFP). A Russian special forces agent was also lightly wounded as he rushed to their assistance, AFP added.

Thirty-seven hostages have been freed since the crisis erupted, FSB spokeman Sergei Ignachenko told AFP.

Meanwhile, Chechen refugees living in Baku, Azerbaijan, organized Thursday a massive demonstration to support the demands of Chechen independence fighters to stop war immediately and to withdraw Russian invaders from Chechnya, sources told Kavkaz Center.

Refugees demanded an end to the Russian massacres of innocent Chechen citizens and a start of political negotiations.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday he would not give in to a Chechen commando which took more than 700 people hostage in a Moscow theater, demanding an end to the Russian military offensives in Chechnya.

"We will not give in to provocations," AFP quoted Putin as saying, following a meeting with Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov, according to Russian news agencies.

"The most important thing is to guarantee the safety of areas near the theater, to help the hostages and to assist their relatives," Putin added, with the clear implication that security forces were contemplating an armed operation to free the hostages.

Speaking some 17 hours after the Chechen independence fighters' operation began, Putin accused the Chechen Commando of being linked to the "foreign terrorist centers" which organized the October 12 bombing in Bali that left 190 people dead.

"This is the largest hostage-taking not only in Russia but also abroad," he noted.

"The same people" who organized the Bali bombings had planned the Moscow hostage-taking, Putin charged.

Putin earlier cancelled a visit to Mexico where he had been due to meet his U.S. counterpart George W. Bush on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific summit.

The hostage-takers have threatened to blow up the theatre if Russia does not withdraw its forces from Chechnya.

Putin has repeatedly refused to negotiate with Chechen fighters, with the exception of a single and inconclusive round of preliminary talks between his envoy for southern Russia and an aide to Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov in Moscow last November.

 

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