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New
victim of the Russian gas
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MOSCOW,
October 31 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Russia broke four days of
silence on Wednesday, October 30, and revealed that the gas used in
storming the Moscow theater was fentanyl, a potent agent responsible for
nearly all of the 119 deaths among the captives.
Moscow
also demanded the extradition of Akhmed Zakayev, an aide to Chechen
leader Aslan Maskhadov, after he was arrested in Denmark on suspicion of
being behind the siege, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Danish
authorities were expected to consider a request for the extradition of
Zakayev on Thursday, October 31.
Health
Minister Yury Shevchenko denied that the gas used in Saturday's special
forces operation to free the hostage was banned under chemical weapons
conventions and said that the active substance in the gas was fentanyl,
a powerful narcotic used as an anesthetic.
"A
fentanyl derivative was used to neutralize the terrorists," the
minister said, referring to the Chechen fighters who held about 800
people hostage in the theater demanding end of war waged by Russia army
against their homeland.
"I
officially declare that chemical substances of the kind banned under
international conventions on chemical weapons were not used," he
said, as quoted by the Interfax news agency.
Russian
officials had previously refused to specify the nature of the gas whose
effects killed most of the 119 hostages who died and has left hundreds
of others still in hospital.
U.S.
Ambassador Alexander Vershbow said Tuesday, October 29, that lives could
have been saved if precise information had been given out immediately
following the operation.
Opiates
such as fentanyl affect pain receptors, induce drowsiness and in
sufficiently strong doses can cause the respiratory system to seize.
Medics
who entered the theater behind the special forces to help the hostages
complained after the operation that they had been given little or no
information or preparation and had wholly inadequate material, including
a lack of stretchers.
Their
claims were echoed by the liberal opposition Yabloko party, which said
in a statement: "The (lack of) organization of medical assistance
to the victims... verges on the criminal."
Yabloko
also called for a thorough investigation of the circumstances of the
dawn assault, but the request was rejected by the ruling majority in the
Duma.
The
Human Rights Watch group Wednesday called for an independent
investigation into the rescue raid, which ended a dramatic 57-hour
standoff in a Moscow theater where Chechen fighters held some 800
hostages.
"Too
many questions have been left unanswered" after 117 hostages died
of gas used to overpower the commando during the raid, said Elizabeth
Andersen, executive director of Human Rights Watch’s Europe and
Central Asia division.
"Increasing
evidence suggests that many hostages died because they were not given
basic medical care immediately after their rescue," the rights
group said in a statement.
According
to emergency workers, many of the 119 hostages who died would still be
alive if medical teams had been better organized and informed about
Russian plans to use the gas.
Moreover,
Russian authorities released information on the gas used only Wednesday,
even "though it is of key importance to medical doctors who are
still treating hostages -- some of whom are still in grave condition --
and to survivors, who may face long-term health consequences," the
group pointed out.
"The
authorities are silent precisely when information is a matter of life or
death," Andersen charged.
An
independent commission would be required to investigate reports of such
negligence as well as evidence of extrajudicial executions, the HRW
statement read, adding that according to Russian media, some of the
hostage-takers were unconscious from the effects of the gas when they
were shot.
A
former intelligence official said Soviet scientists had worked hard
during the Cold War on "bio-regulators," agents that could
alter mass behavior and even put entire cities to sleep.
In
another development, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Valery Loshinin
said Moscow hoped that Denmark would "take the necessary
steps" to extradite Akhmed Zakayev after the Chechen envoy appeared
in a Danish court following his arrest at Russia's request.
A
Danish judge, Lisbeth Christensen, ordered the 43-year-old Zakayev
detained until November 12, saying there was a risk that he would flee.
His
lawyer, high-profile former deputy Bjorn Elmquist, said he would appeal
the ruling.
If
authorities have still not ruled on Zakayev's extradition by November
12, a judge will again be asked to rule on whether the Chechen envoy
should be kept in custody or whether he can be released.
Heavily
armed police surrounded a Copenhagen court as Zakayev appeared at a
closed-door hearing Wednesday following his arrest in the Danish
capital.
The
city's police chief Hanne Bech Hansen said Zakayev was "suspected
of a series of terrorist acts over the period 1996-1999 and of having
taken part in planning the hostage siege in Moscow."
Danish
Justice Minister Lene Espersen said after the court ordered Zakayev's
detention that legal authorities in Denmark needed "stronger and
more complete evidence" supporting allegations against the Chechen
envoy if they were to consider an extradition.
"I
want to make it very clear, we need solid proof from the Russian
authorities before we can accept an extradition. Russia should also
promise that Zakayev would not receive the death penalty," she told
reporters.
Such
a guarantee would remove a key legal obstacle to Copenhagen extraditing
Zakayev, according to John Vestergaard, associate professor of criminal
law at Copenhagen University.
"The
code on extradition specifically states that if the guarantee is issued
so that the receiving state promises not to execute, then there is no
obstacle,” he told AFP.
Moscow
has guaranteed Denmark that Zakayev will not face the death penalty if
extradited, according to Russia's Interfax news agency.
The
arrest of Zakayev -- the main link in rare contacts between the Chechen
leadership and Moscow -- came as Russian President Vladimir Putin made
good on a vow to crack down on Chechen independence fighters.
Zakayev
had been attending a two-day international conference on Chechnya in
Copenhagen attended by representatives of the Chechen diaspora and
non-governmental organizations.
Russia
officially filed an extradition request, but Danish Justice Minister
Lene Espersen said legal authorities there needed "stronger and
more complete evidence" supporting allegations against Zakayev.
Russia
declared a moratorium on capital punishment in 1996 but has not formally
abolished the death penalty.
The
Amnesty International rights group late Wednesday, October 29, called on
Russia to guarantee that Zakayev would not be subjected to ill
treatment, torture, or the death penalty if extradited.
The
London-based group also urged Denmark not to yield Zakayev without those
guarantees.
A
senior prosecutor said Russia would provide written guarantees to the
Danish authorities that Zakayev would not face the death penalty and
would be granted full legal rights.
Russia
has accused Zakayev of being behind the 57-hour hostage-taking, although
he has denied responsibility and condemned the attack in an interview
with AFP Monday, October 27.
The
toll of the hostage crisis rose slightly as two more rescued hostages
died overnight; bringing the number of captives killed to 119, the
Moscow chief medical officer Andrei Seltsovsky said.
A
total of 510 former hostages have been released from hospital but 152
others remain, eight of them in critical condition, Interfax quoted a
health official as saying.
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