A leading Chechen rebel on Wednesday called on Islamist militants in
Russia's North Caucasus to disrupt the upcoming Winter Games in the
Black Sea resort of Sochi, reversing his previous appeal not to target
civilians in the region.
Sochi is hosting the Winter Olympics in February in what has
been described as President Vladimir Putin's pet project. The overall
bill for the games stands at $51 billion, making them by far the most
expensive Olympics in history.
Doku Umarov, a widely known Chechen rebel leader, urged his men
to "do their utmost to derail" the games which he described as "satanic
dances on the bones of our ancestors."
"We have the obligation to use all means to prevent this," he said in a video published on a rebel website on Wednesday.
Umarov last year urged his men to avoid hitting civilian targets
because Russians in Moscow were taking to the streets en masse to
protest against Putin.
Analysts have said the Islamic insurgency raging across the
North Caucasus mountains that tower over Sochi is a daunting threat to
the games — although rebels have not attacked Sochi so far.
Dagestan, which lies about 500 kilometers (300 miles) east of
Sochi, has become the center of the insurgency that spread across the
North Caucasus region after two separatist wars in the 1990s in
neighboring Chechnya. Rebels seeking to carve out a caliphate, or
Islamic state, have targeted police and other officials in near-daily
shootings and bombings. Umarov is believed to be their most influential
leader at the moment.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the elder of the two ethnic Chechen brothers
from Russia who are accused of staging the Boston bombings, spent six
months last year in Dagestan.
The Sochi 2014 Organizing Committee said in an emailed comment
that ensuring security at the games is "the responsibility of the state"
and will be its priority.
"We are confident that the games will be safe and comfortable for all as guaranteed by the Russian state," the committee said.
Russia's National Anti-Terrorism Committee said in a statement
on Wednesday that they are working to eliminate threats at all
international sporting events in the country including the Olympics.
Officials said that they aim "to identify and avert various threats,
including those of terrorism".
Officials at the International Olympic Committee voiced confidence in the Russian security precautions.
"We have no doubt that the Russians will be up to the task and
we continue to have full confidence in them," IOC spokesman Mark Adams
told The Associated Press.
Press officers for the Interior Ministry in Russia's Southern District which includes the North Caucasus declined to comment.
An officer of the Interior Ministry's special task force in the
North Caucasus, who asked not to be identified because he was not
allowed to comment publicly, told The Associated Press that Umarov's
statement could prompt Russians to step up their efforts to comb the
mountainous areas where Umarov could be hiding.
The United States declared Umarov's group a terrorist
organization in 2011 and offered up to $5 million for information
leading to his capture.
Umarov's group is blamed for bombing a Moscow airport in January 2011, two subway stations in 2010 and a Russian train in 2009.
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