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http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/militant-claims-responsibility-for-kazan-mufti-attack/463242.html
Militant Claims Responsibility for Kazan Mufti Attack 
07 August 2012
By Jonathan Earle
A man who describes himself as the “amir of Tatarstan's mujahedin” claiming 
responsibility for the attacks on Muslim clergy in Kazan last month.

An Islamist militant has claimed responsibility for attacks on two moderate 
Muslim leaders last month in the republic of Tatarstan, as regional 
investigators announced that they are searching for the militant and his 
associate.

Meanwhile, the republic's legislature has moved to tighten controls of 
religious organizations amid rising fears that Islamic radicalism has spread 
from the troubled North Caucasus region to the more secular central Russian 
republic.

In a grainy video that appeared on YouTube on Friday, a man later identified as 
Islamist militant Rais Mingaleyev said he ordered the attacks that seriously 
wounded Tatarstan's top religious leader and killed another prominent official 
on July 19.

The man in the video, who appears in a forest with an assault rifle under a 
banner with Arabic lettering, refers to himself as the amir of Tatarstan's 
mujahedin and threatens to carry out further attacks against "enemies of 
Allah." He also demands that the region's imams adopt Shariah.

Rais Suleimanov, deputy director of the Center for Eurasian and International 
Studies at Kazan State University, identified the man in the video as 
Mingaleyev.

"He's using the video to announce a jihad, but it's very difficult to say 
whether he actually planned the attacks. He might simply be trying to take 
credit for somebody else's dirty work," Suleimanov said by telephone Monday.

In an earlier video, which appeared shortly after the killings, the same man 
pledges allegiance to Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov, Suleimanov added.

Investigators are searching for Mingaleyev, 36, and Robert Valeyev, 35, on 
suspicion of planning the attacks on Valiulla Yakupov and chief mufti Ildus 
Faizov, the regional Investigative Committee said in a statement Friday.

Seven people have already been arrested in connection with the attacks, 
including 57-year-old Rustem Gataullin — board chairman at the Idel-Hajj 
company and a suspected mastermind. 

Law enforcement officials have announced that the motive in at least one attack 
appeared to be related to Faizov's business interests, as well as "ideological 
disagreements."

The investigation has been condemned as heavy-handed by some Muslim leaders. 
Nail Nabiullin, head of the Al-Ikhlas mosque in Kazan, said last month that 
police had detained 400 to 600 Muslims and conducted about 160 raids.

"The principle 'grab everyone in succession' is causing even greater distrust 
toward the police among the population," Nabiullin told Interfax.

Meanwhile, the regional legislature passed a law banning foreigners from 
founding religious organizations and requiring additional checks on religious 
leaders trained abroad, a response to suspected links between Wahhabists from 
abroad and local militants.

Faizov, 49, received multiple injuries, including two broken legs, after 
assailants detonated three car bombs in his SUV in Kazan the day before the 
Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Yakupov, a prominent cleric who headed the Spiritual Board of Muslims' 
education department, died minutes earlier after being shot by unidentified 
gunmen outside his house in Kazan.

President Vladimir Putin has promised that the perpetrators will be punished.


Read more: 
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/militant-claims-responsibility-for-kazan-mufti-attack/463242.html#ixzz22r8KeZ00
 
The Moscow Times 


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