Nadyr Khachiliev

Nadirshakh Mugadovich "Nadir" Khachilayev (Russian: Надиршах Мугадович Хачилаев, alternatively Nadyr Khachiliev, Nadir Khachiliev,;[2][3] 1959–2003) was a Russian politician, member of the 2nd State Duma, lower house of the Federal Assembly.[4]

Nadirshakh Khachilayev
Надиршах Хачилаев
Member of the State Duma
In office
28 December 1996[1]  11 September 1998
Preceded byGamid Gamidov
Succeeded byGadzhi Makhachev
Parliamentary groupOur Home – Russia
ConstituencyMakhachkala
Personal details
Born
Nadyr Mugadovich Khachilayev

(1959-06-10)10 June 1959
Kuma, Laksky District, Dagestan ASSR, RSFSR, Soviet Union
Died12 August 2003(2003-08-12) (aged 44)
Makhachkala, Dagestan, Russia
Children6

He was chairman of the Dagestan branch of the Fund for Peace and the Union of Muslims of Russia, which was designated as an extremist organization by the Ministry of Justice of Russia. In the 1990s and 2000s, he was considered the leader of the Lak people.[5]

Biography

Early life

Born on 10 July 1959 in the village of Kuma, Laksky District, Dagestan ASSR to a family of ethnic Lak shepherd. His brothers Magomed (1957–2000) and Adam (1966–1993) were karatekas. In 1977, after graduating from high school, Nadyr worked as a shepherd.[6]

He served in the Soviet Army on the territory of modern-day Belarus and Ukraine. In 1980 he moved to Leningrad, where he joined the city karate team. He had a black belt in karate. In 1983 he studied for one year at the translation department of the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute, and then transferred to the correspondence department, which he graduated in 1987. In addition, he studied at the Krasnodar State Institute of Physical Culture and at the Lesgaft Institute.[6]

Political activity

In Moscow, he worked for the Hermes security company, which provided debt collection. In February 1996 with the support of Abdul-Vahed Niyazov Khachilayev headed the Union of Muslims of Russia, replacing the mufti Mukaddas Bibarsov. Later, this organization was recognized as extremist by the Russian Ministry of Justice.[7]

In 1996, he accompanied the Secretary of the Security Council of Russia Alexander Lebed during his peacekeeping trip to Chechen separatist leaders. On 8 December 1996, in a by-election to the 2nd State Duma of Russia Khachilayev won the Makhachkala constituency.[6] On March 21, 1997, he was admitted to Our Home – Russia faction. Khachilayev participated in the release of more than 50 hostages taken by Chechen separatists in the late 1990s.[8]

Connection to the Egyptian Islamic Jihad

In 1996–1997, when Egyptian Islamic Jihad members Ayman al-Zawahiri, Ahmad Salama Mabruk and Mahmud Hisham al-Hennawi were detained in Makhachkala, Dagestan, Khachiliev was an advocate of their release.[4][9][2] Khachiliev denies helping any imprisoned Arabs, and denies any ties to extremism.[2]

1998 Makhachkala riot

On 20 May 1998 a motorcade of Khachilayev brothers, returning from Chechnya, was stopped for a document check by police officers in the center of Makhachkala. Their attempt to disarm the Khachilayevs' guards led to a shootout, during which one of the police officers was killed. Then Nadir Khachilayev barricaded himself at home, together with some of his supporters. On May 21, at a rally gathered by supporters of the Khachilayevs on the central square of Makhachkala near the building of the State Council, there was another shootout with police officers. The rally resulted in the storming of government building. Magomed Khachilayev and his supporters held it for 24 hours while the negotiations were held. During the clashes, several police officers were killed, and four policemen were captured by Khachilayevs' supporters. The Prosecutor General's office accused Nadir and Magomed Khachilayev in the seizure of the State Council building, and after 11 September 1998, the State Duma deprived Nadir Khachilayev of parliamentary immunity. Magomed was arrested.[10][6][5]

Criminal prosecution

Nadir Khachilayev was hiding in Chechnya and in the Wahhabi enclave in Karamakhi.[11] In October 1999, he was arrested by a special force unit.[6] However, Khachilaev's lawyers stated that he was detained in Moscow, where he arrived at the invitation of FSB to negotiate his mediation in the release of General Gennady Shpigun, who was abducted in March 1999 and was held captive by the Islamists.[8] In June 2000, Nadirshakh and Magomed Khachilayev were found guilty of organizing hostage-taking and illegal possession of weapons and sentenced by the Supreme Court of Dagestan to 1.5 years and 3 years in prison respectively and 41,000 rubles in a fine. However, both were released in the courtroom by the amnesty on the occasion of the 55th anniversary of the Victory.[6][10]

In January 2002, Khachilayev was detained in Makhachkala. The prosecutor's office considered him perpetuator of the January 18 bombing of a truck with Internal Troops servicemen, which killed seven people. Operatives seized weapons and ammunition found in Khachilayev's house, as well as video tapes of abuse of Russian Army servicemen. At the same time, the official representative of Dagestan FSB branch expressed bewilderment at the actions of the police officers, saying that they did not inform the FSB, which was conducting a criminal case.[12] On January 25, Khachilayev went on a hunger strike. On 11 March 2002, he was fully acquitted by the Sovetsky District Court of Makhachkala.[13]

Death

On 11 August 2003, Nadirshah Khachilayev was assassinated near his own house in Makhachkala, when he was getting out of his Toyota Land Cruiser. Shots were fired from a passing VAZ-21099 car. A day later it was found on Parkhomenko Street, where the mansion of Khachilayev's longtime opponent is located, then-mayor Said Amirov. Among the versions of the murder were the alleged return of Nadir to politics, as well as blood feud: in May 1998, five OMON servicemen were killed in a shootout near Khachilayev's house.[14]

References

  1. Khachilayev Nadirshakh Mugadovich, politika.su
  2. (subscription required)Higgins, Andrew; Cullison, Alan (July 2, 2002). "Saga of Dr. Zawahri Sheds Light On the Roots of al Qaeda Terror". The Wall Street Journal.
  3. "The Situation in Dagastan" (PDF). Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. September 21, 1999.
  4. Martin R Mason; Leland Montgomery (2 September 2015). FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-329-38525-2.
  5. "Братья Хачилаевы готовы взойти на эшафот" [The Khachilayev brothers are ready to climb the scaffold]. Kommersant (in Russian). 2000-05-13.
  6. Roman Silantyev (2008). Ислам в современной России. Энциклопедия [Islam in Modern Russia. Encyclopedia] (in Russian). p. 576. ISBN 978-5-9265-0467-2.
  7. "Я приехал в Москву на разведку. Надиршах Хачилаев возвращается в политику" [I came to Moscow for reconnaissance. Nadirshakh Khachilayev returns to politics]. Vremya Novostei (in Russian). 2001-12-24.
  8. "Хачилаев признался" [Khachilayev admitted]. Kommersant (in Russian). 1999-10-15.
  9. Jeune Afrique L'intelligent (in French). Groupe Jeune Afrique. 2002. p. 116.
  10. "В зоне особого правосудия" [In the zone of special justice]. Seven Days (in Russian). 2000-06-14. Archived from the original on 2012-07-19.
  11. "Финансист Хаттаба" [Khattab's financier]. Novaya Gazeta (in Russian). 2004-02-16.
  12. "Надиршах Хачилаев арестован за подрыв милиционеров" [Nadirshakh Khachilayev arrested for blowing up policemen]. Izvestiya (in Russian). 2002-01-20.
  13. "У Хачилаева всегда хватало врагов" [Khachilayev always had enough enemies]. Rossiyskaya Gazeta (in Russian). 2003-08-13.
  14. "Сын экс-депутата Госдумы ранен в перестрелке в Москве" [The son of a former State Duma deputy wounded in a shootout in Moscow]. Vzglyad (in Russian). 2012-05-25.
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