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Last updated: 7 February 2012

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Al-Qaeda 'coordinator' killed in south Russia

03:07 PM (MSD) August 31, 2009

One of two militants killed in a shootout with security forces in the Russian North Caucasus republic of Dagestan late on Sunday was an Algerian-born member of al-Qaeda, a security official told RIA Novosti.

The militants were killed in an operation carried out by the local Federal Security Service near the town of Khasavyurt, close to the border with Chechnya. Two officers were injured in the clash, the FSB official said on Monday.

"A foreign mercenary killed in the special operation has been identified. He is an Algerian national, al-Qaeda's coordinator in Dagestan, known among the militants as Doctor Muhammad," the official said.

Another security source in Dagestan said the Al-Qaeda militant held French citizenship.

Doctor Muhammad had arranged for infiltrations of militants into Dagestan and neighboring Ingushetia from Georgia and Azerbaijan, another FSB spokesman said.

He is known to have arrived in Russia's North Caucasus in 1999 via Georgia. He was a member of the international terrorist Hattab's group until 2007, responsible for organizing a terrorist network in Chechnya.

"In 2007, he was sent to Dagestan with instructions to bring the local gangs under control, to ensure their funding from abroad and arrange for channels for militants to infiltrate into the republic," an FSB official said.

In the republic's capital, Makhachkala, gunmen killed in the early hours of Monday an OMON special police officer. "The criminals knocked at the door where the police officer lived and shot him five times," a police spokesman said.

Militant attacks on troops, police and other officials have been reported almost daily in Dagestan and Russia's other mainly Muslim North Caucasus republics in recent months.

On August 17, Ingushetia was rocked by a suicide bombing which killed at least 24 police officers and injured 136.

Following the blast, Ingushetia's president, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, returned to the republic after spending two months in Moscow recovering from serious injuries sustained in a car bomb attack on his motorcade.

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20090831/155973015.html


12:01 PM (MSK) February 7, 2012
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10:19 AM (MSK) February 3, 2012
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Editorial
As Russia and the United States prepare for their respective presidential elections, tensions between the countries are growing. The central point of contention is U.S. ballistic missile defense (BMD) plans. Russia has several levers, including its ability to cut off supply lines to the NATO-led war effort in Afghanistan, to use in the standoff over BMD, but the United States could retaliate by supporting the current protests in Russia. Moscow is willing to escalate tensions with Washington but will not push the crisis to the point where relations could formally break.
Editorial
As Russia and the United States prepare for their respective presidential elections, tensions between the countries are growing. The central point of contention is U.S. ballistic missile defense (BMD) plans. Russia has several levers, including its ability to cut off supply lines to the NATO-led war effort in Afghanistan, to use in the standoff over BMD, but the United States could retaliate by supporting the current protests in Russia. Moscow is willing to escalate tensions with Washington but will not push the crisis to the point where relations could formally break.
Keyur Patel
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Russia released a preliminary estimate for 2011 GDP growth on Tuesday - and at 4.3 per cent, it looks pretty healthy. The figure crept ahead of analyst expectations, buoyed by a strong recovery in consumer demand over the year, while 2010 growth was revised upwards, also to 4.3 per cent. Renaissance Capital was cautiously bullish, calling the forecast 'reason for a (modest) celebration'.
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