http://www.arabnews.com/print/418456

 
Russian Muslim leader killed in attack
by Roman Kruchinin
KAZAN, 
Russia: The Islamic leader of Russia’s main Muslim region of Tatarstan 
was wounded yesterday and another cleric killed in rare attacks in an 
oil-rich republic often praised for its religious tolerance.
The mufti of Tatarstan, Ildus Faizov, was wounded in a car explosion 
while his former deputy, Valiulla Yakupov, was shot dead in the strikes 
an hour apart as Muslims prepared to begin observing Ramadan at sundown.
Investigators opened a murder case while the region’s leader linked the
 attacks in Tatarstan’s main city of Kazan to the clerics’ work to 
promote moderate Islam.
“Our leaders have followed the policy of traditional Islam. It is clear
 that there are other movements, and what happened today is a clear 
challenge,” said the presdient of Tatarstan, Rustam Minnikhanov, 
pledging a firm response to radicals.
Russia’s top Muslim cleric Ravil Gainutdin said that those behind the 
attacks were seeking to place a bomb under the foundation of “peace and 
order of the entire Russian Federation.”
“I have to admit that a wave of violence has come to the Volga region too,” he 
said.
The oil-producing region on the Volga River is touted by authorities as
 an example of peaceful coexistence of Muslims and Christians, in 
contrast to the troubled North Caucasus, where the Kremlin fought two 
wars against separatists in the past 20 years.
But over the past few years officials have sounded the alarm about 
radical Islam spreading to a region where secessionist sentiments ran 
high following the Soviet breakup.
Yakupov, 48, was shot on the porch of his apartment block and died from his 
wounds in his car.
Faizov was wounded when his vehicle exploded in another part of the city, the 
Investigative Committee said.
“The Toyota Land Cruiser with the Mufti of Tatarstan inside, Ildus Faizov, was 
blown up,” it said.
“He was thrown out of the car by the force of the blast. He has been 
hospitalized with wounds of varying severity.”
Television showed flames and smoke bursting out of Faizov’s black vehicle, 
which regional police said he was driving.
Faizov, 49, has mounted a crackdown on extremists among the Muslim clergy of 
the republic of four million inhabitants.
He has said the main threat comes from followers of radical forms of 
Islam, Salafism and Wahhabism, whose ideology is now preached in some of
 the mosques in Tatarstan.
“The Salafis and Wahhabis constitute a very great danger. There are no 
moderates among them. They all finish one day by taking up arms,” Faizov
 said in an interview with AFP last year shortly after his election.
Yakupov headed the education department of the Muslim Spiritual 
Directorate of Tatarstan at the time of his death, but until recently 
was Faizov’s first deputy.
In May, the Kazan Week website listed him as Tatarstan’s second most 
influential Muslim, calling him the “strategist behind Faizov’s policy 
of rooting out religious extremism.”
Russia fears that the radical Islam of the North Caucasus whose rebels 
are calling for the creation of an Islamic state could spread to its 
other historically Muslim regions.
Militant leader Doku Umarov last year warned that his fighters were on a
 mission to “free the lands of our brothers,” referring to Russian 
regions with large Muslim populations.
In November 2010, three Islamists were killed in Tatarstan in a rare armed 
clash with police.
Around half of Tatarstan’s population is Muslim, but in Kazan few women
 wear headscarves and a huge mosque stands beside an Orthodox cathedral.
“The Salafis, the Islamic radicals have been active in Tatarstan for 
the past two years,” said Alexei Malashenko, an analyst with the 
Carnegie Moscow Center. “This violent flare-up was expected.”
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