DONT MIND US, WE ARE JUST RESTING. CLICK HERE
I'M THE CHIEF HERE, YOU WALK! CLICK HERE
IT WAS A RUSSIAN SPY, REALLY! CLICK HERE
PC is the child molester Abdullah the Foolah Hows it hanging cockbreath.What happened to your muji's,got a beating did they hahahahahahahahaha.Gave your mama 5 for blowjob and she gave me change.
Bulent Ecevit determined to wipe out Mohammedanism!!!!!
Ten killed in police shootout with Turkish Hezbollah adds new raid, background 02/14/2000
Deutsche Presse-Agentur
02/14/2000
Ankara (dpa) - A shootout early Monday morning in the southeast city of Van left five police officers and five members of the Turkish Hezbollah movement dead, the semi-official Anadolu news agency reported.
The shootout began at 2:00 a.m. (2300 GMT) when police attempted to raid an Hezbollah safe house and continued at another house after one of the Hezbollah militants escaped. Five other police officers were wounded in the shootout.
Anadolu quoted a man who lived 50 metres from the second house as saying shots could still be heard at 7:30 a.m.
Earlier Anadolu reports had said that only three Hezbollah militants had been killed and two others captured alive but later reports made no mention of any Hezbollah militants surviving
the incident.
Later in the day, funeral ceremonies for the five officers were interrupted when police were called to another house in Van where two Hezbollah militants were holed up.
After a short exchange of fire, one of the militants escaped and the other was lightly wounded.
Meanwhile, operations continued around the country to round up members of the radical Islamic movement with 19 people being taken into custody in the Mediterranean city of Antalya.
``This fight will go on until Hezbollah is exterminated, ``Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit said on Monday.
In the past month more than 1,300 people have been taken into custody for suspected links to the Hezbollah movement and some 58 bodies belonging to people kidnapped and murdered by Hezbollah members have been found.
The series of arrests and the finding of Hezbollah victims began after a police shoot-out with Hezbollah members at a safe house in Istanbul on January 17.
The fundamentalist movement began in the 1980s and took the name Hezbollah (Warriors of God) in 1990. The main aim of the group is to overthrow the secular regime in Turkey and replace it with one governed by Shariah or Islamic law.
ANALYSIS-After Ocalan, Turkey hits Islamic rebels 02/14/2000
By Elif Unal
ANKARA, Feb 14 (Reuters) - A decline in Kurdish separatist violence following the capture last year of rebel chief Abdullah Ocalan has allowed Turkey to crack down on its other arch enemy,
Islamic radicalism.
Turkey sees the two movements as twin evils, one threatening its territorial unity, the other the established secularist ideology that binds the nation to the developed West and its aspirations
of European Union membership.
Since its foundation, the republic has fought a rearguard action against the two ``demons'' and in the process has earned an international reputation for heavy-handed crushing of dissent.
The armed forces, pledged to protect the secular nation and its borders, have traditionally led the official resistance.
Now, with armed Kurdish separatists on the back foot, the Islamists, both armed and peaceful, are under assault.
Almost a year after spiriting Ocalan from Kenya to Turkey last February 15, Turkish intelligence and security forces in the mainly Kurdish southeast are now occupied not with Ocalan's Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), but with the rival Islamic rebels of the Hizbullah group.
WORST OF BOTH WORLDS?
Police hunting Hizbullah guerrillas have so far uncovered 56 bodies buried under sheds and basements across the country. Most
victims were either Kurds with ties to liberal Islamic sects or Ocalan sympathisers.
``Hizbullah was laid bare once the guns were silenced and life began normalising in the southeast,'' Hurriyet newspaper commentator Enis Berberoglu told Reuters.
The region was a battleground between troops and PKK rebels for 15 years until last February when Turkish forces apprehended the guerrilla chief abroad and brought him to Turkey.
Since then, a partial PKK withdrawal from the region on Ocalan's orders -- which Turkey says is a bid to evade his death sentence for treason -- has brought a lull in fighting.
``The state has gained an additional ability to clamp down on Hizbullah after Ocalan's capture and the defeat of the PKK,'' said Hurriyet columnist Sedat Ergin.
Turkish officials say Hizbullah aims to establish strict Islamic Sharia law in overwhelmingly Moslem Turkey. Hints of Kurdish nationalism in the group lead many to see it as a mutant
combination of radical Islam and separatism.
It rose to prominence along with the PKK in the turbulent southeast of the early 1980s. The PKK, while a Marxist group at heart, nevertheless at times flirted with Islamic rhetoric to appeal to conservatives in the underdeveloped southeast.
Before the PKK, the most serious uprising in the southeast was led by Sheikh Said, who similarly blended Islam with Kurdish aspirations for autonomy.
The region's Kurds are generally conservative, loyal to mosques and extended family or tribal groups. Hizbullah, organised through religious centres and appealing to deeply conservative sentiments, was a rival to the PKK.
Turkey strenuously denies charges that it fostered Hizbullah to act as a counter-guerrilla force against the PKK.
``Hizbullah was not founded to combat the PKK. But the two began fighting in the early 1990s when the first emerged as a challenge to the second's superiority,'' said Tayfun Devecioglu,
a commentator for the mass-selling Sabah daily.
STICK TO BEAT POLITICAL ISLAM
The state is now using the grisly Hizbullah killings as a stick with which to beat peaceful Islamist politicians who were already reeling from a poor electoral performance last year, from internal rivalries and legal assaults.
Secularist Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit, backed by the mainstream media, has pointed to the killings as an inevitable consequence of mixing politics and religion.
``Hizbullah is officially seen as a serious danger that could replace the PKK terror,'' said Berberoglu.
His view was echoed by a senior general last week.
``Terror spread by the PKK has ended for today. But there are new threats in the queue,'' Anatolian news agency quoted General
Metin Ozdegirmenci as saying in the southeast city of Gaziantep.
06:12 02-14-00
Question: Why does the U.S. regime approve of Turks slaughtering Mohammedan terrorists and 40,000 Kurdish civilians and turning thousands of Kurdish villages into ashes and rubble, but on the other hand condemn the Russians for wiping out Mohammedan terrorists and a few hundred collateral civilians and demolishing Chechen terrorist fortresses such as Grozny?
Could it just be that the shoe is now on the other foot?
Turkish city feels pain of Hizbullah killings 02/14/2000
By Daren Butler
BATMAN, Turkey, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Cengiz Altun was one of the first reporters to write about alleged links between the Turkish state and Hizbullah's Islamic militants early in 1992.
A month later, the 22-year-old was gunned down by three men as he drove to work in the southeastern city of Batman. His father Mehmet Emin says nothing has been done to find his killers.
``There were many death threats, I still remember the phone calls. He was killed on February 24, 1992. Ever since then his mother has been ill.'' Emin falls silent, his face clouds over.
A framed photograph of Cengiz, a determined expression on his face, hangs in the local offices of Turkey's main Kurdish party, HADEP (People's Democracy Party), along with those of 11 local
politicians killed in Batman during the same period.
UNSOLVED MURDERS
Some 10 years after Hizbullah surfaced in this mainly Kurdish community, people are still afraid to talk about the militants. There is a strong belief that state officials used them to combat the spread of Kurdish nationalism.
In the home city of the group's founder Huseyin Velioglu, locals are wary of suspected Hizbullah supporters. Last month Velioglu was killed in a shootout with police in Istanbul. His corpse now lies in an unmarked grave on Batman's outskirts.
Velioglu's death and the capture of his companions triggered raids on Hizbullah hideouts across Turkey. Police have exhumed dozens of the group's victims, most of them Kurds, focusing a media spotlight on its gruesome torture methods.
``There is a profound silence in Batman around the mystery killings,'' says local HADEP leader Hasan Iltem. ``Actually, they are no mystery at all. We know who killed them.'' Party records show there have been 830 unsolved murders in Batman since 1991.
Iltem believes, like many in the city, that Hizbullah was developed by state operatives to stem the influence of Abdullah Ocalan's Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) as its 15-year armed fight for self-rule in the southeast gathered pace a decade ago.
Now Ocalan is on death row following his capture a year ago, and his forces have declared an end to their armed struggle, the state has pounced on Hizbullah, the theory goes.
Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit has ordered an investigation into allegations that arms imported by local officials to Batman in the mid-1990s ended up in the hands of Hizbullah, though police say they have most of the weapons.
``They just used the banner of religion to create a rival to the PKK. There were no Islamic ideological convictions behind it, but they exploited the religious piety among locals,'' Ilter
said. In the bustling market place below his office, women in Islamic-style headscarves buy vegetables and traders gossip.
INDOCTRINATION PROCESS
One local public figure, declining to be named, recalls how the movement developed as migration from conflict-ridden villages fuelled the growth of Batman. The small, sleepy town of a few decades ago is now a sprawling city of 400,000, circled by poverty-stricken shanty towns.
He says Hizbullah recruiters focused their indoctrination process on migrant school pupils and infiltrating the mosques.
``I remember a teacher at the Batman High School. When he first came he would speak to the kids about creating a state for the Kurds. Later all the talk was about jihad (religious war). He said the Islamist movement would have to fight Kurdish nationalists if it was to develop.''
Ultimately, Hizbullah took control of most of the mosques in Batman. In doing so it absorbed pious young men with a genuine belief in the group's aim to overthrow Turkey's secular system
and create a state based on Islamic sharia law.
Senior military officials now say Islamic militancy, covering an array of groups, presents a greater threat to Turkey than the PKK.
In the sunlit courtyard of Batman's main mosque, worshippers gathering for midday prayers shy away from comment on the Islamic militants. ``We are pious men doing our religious duty. Hizbullah
means nothing to the people here,'' says one bearded old man as he walks towards the great mosque doors.
In recent years, violent attacks in the city have declined and people talk of an increasingly peaceful atmosphere. With fears receding, local attention can be seen shifting gradually towards
Batman's considerable economic problems as it grows away from a traditional agricultural livelihood.
Although the city's large oil refinery has fuelled development and created much employment, there are growing crowds of jobless men filling the downtown tea houses.
When there are no strangers around, they whisper about the city's most infamous son, Velioglu.
But there are few visitors to the Hizbullah leader's muddy, hillside grave -- police have detained many of those who have ventured there. Only children, chattering in Kurdish, go near the isolated spot, looking out over Batman's smoky skyline and distant snow-topped mountains.
21:06 02-13-00
"Cruel as a Turk!"
Turkish police detain more than 100 human rights activists 02/12/2000
Associated Press Newswires
02/12/2000
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - Police on Saturday detained more than 100 human rights activists as they prepared to march through central
Istanbul demanding an end to human rights violations in Turkey.
Turkey's independent Human Rights Association, which organized the march, said at least 111 people were detained, including
the head of the association's Istanbul branch, Eren Keskin.
Riot police lined one of Istanbul's main commercial streets and detained the activists before they reached the square where the march was to begin. Police had not given authorization for the march.
"No to torture! Pressure will not stop us!" a group of activists chanted while police hauled them into buses. Human rights groups say torture is widespread in police stations.
Turkey has vowed to improve it's human rights record. Ankara formally became a candidate to the European Union in December and EU leaders said human rights are key to its accession to the union.
February 15, 2000
KFOR as protection for terrorists
Moscow, February 14 (Tanjug) - The representative of Russian Ministry of Defence Leonid Ivashov said today in Moscow that the KFOR is the only one guilty for increase of violence in Kosovo and Metohija, warning that the troubles with the Albanian separatists can be expected.
NATO is now paying for mistakes he made, said lieutenant-general Ivashov, who is the head of the Main Office for International Military Cooperation of Russian Ministry of Defence.
KFOR soldiers, said the agency, arrested 40 persons for whom they suspected that were involved in yesterday clashes in Kosovska Mitrovica, in which one Albanian got killed, and several French soldiers, Serbs and Albanians were wounded.
Ivashov stressed in his interview to the British agency that NATO was persistently protecting the Albanian separatists in Kosovo and Metohija shortly before the last year aggression on Yugoslavia, and after that.
He reminded that the western European countries didn't listen to the Russian arguments and essential issues - how it was possible to form an armed power in one region, power which requests secession of the region from Yugoslav federation?
Today, NATO became the hostage because of these separatists, who tried to create their own, independent state, connected to Albania, warned Ivashov.
The bloody truth of how Nato changed the rules to win a 'moral war' in Yugoslavia
By Robert Fisk
The Independent on line
7 February 2000
For me, the proof came near the end of the Yugoslav war, when Nato bombed a hospital at Surdulice on 31 May last year. Serb soldiers were hiding in the basement, civilian refugees sleeping
above them. The soldiers survived, the civilians were slaughtered in the raid and James Shea, Nato's king of excuses, announced that it was "a military target".
Did he know did Nato know that this building was a hospital, that there were civilians as well as Yugoslav military hiding there? Sure, the Yugoslav army were using their own Serb people
as human shields. And shame upon them. But if Nato knew this, then it broke international law. Article 50, paragraph 3, of the 1949 Geneva Conventions' Protocol 1 specifically demands
the safeguarding of civilian lives even in the presence of "individuals who do not come within the definition of civilians".
The bodies of the dead refugees were laid out in the afternoon sun on the day of their death. One teenage girl lay on the grass a few metres from a book of love poems; her tragic love and death
was researched and reported in The Independent in November. She was killed by Nato. So was a young and brilliant Serb mathematics student, cut down as she tried to rescue the wounded at Varvarin bridge. An American jet had bombed the narrow old river bridge, killing the civilians walking across it. It was a saint's day in Varvarin and a market day the attack happened at about 1pm and the bridge was too narrow to take a tank.
Just because there wasn't a tank on the bridge at the time, Mr Shea told us, didn't mean a tank didn't cross it. But the bridge was too narrow for any Yugoslav tank. And about 20 minutes
after the first bloody assault, another American jet attacked, just in time to kill the rescuers. The girl, who had just been awarded top prize at her Belgrade college, was killed by this US pilot as she tried to pull a wounded man from the road. The same bomb beheaded the local priest as he emerged from his church.
In the countryside around lay what appeared to be parts of Nato's favourite weapon, cluster-bombs. They were dropped across all of Yugoslavia, and most of their civilian victims were in the south of Serbia. Cluster-bombs tore many of the Albanian refugees to pieces on the mistargeted convoys of refugees in the early part of the war. And cluster-bombs possibly dropped by British aircraft killed civilians in the Serbian city of Nis when a plane mistargeted a local military barracks. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson, was so outraged at the Nis attack that she pleaded with alliance officials to take greater care in their bombardment, as well as condemning Serbia's
"ethnic cleansing" of Kosovo.
At some point in the second half of the Yugoslav war, Nato decided to stop apologising for civilian deaths.
And you can see why. From its initial attacks on real military barracks and facilities almost all of them empty Nato's air bombardment moved to dual-use factories and then "targets of opportunity" (which doomed many a Kosovo refugee travelling in convoys in which police vehicles were present) and then slid promiscuously to transportation routes and hospitals which hid soldiers and the Serb television station.
Today's Human Rights Watch report is the nearest we have seen so far to the unvarnished, bloody truth about Nato's campaign in Yugoslavia. If it depends too heavily on Yugoslav references, including the carefully produced and detailed though sometimes
selective Belgrade government's "White Book" on Nato "crimes", its analysis of alliance tactics, claims and barefaced lies (a word not used by Human Rights Watch, of course) provides a
new balance to the history of last year's "moral" war.
It condemns Nato for the attack on Serb television headquarters as opposed to transmitters on the basis that it could not be regarded as a military target, only a propaganda target. And that's exactly how the cabinet minister Clare Short justified the killing of 16 studio technicians and a young make-up
artist. Needless to say, Nato never bombed Croatian television headquarters when it was pumping out propaganda of a similar kind in 1992.
After walking through the rubble of the Serb studios at the time, I reflected that when you kill people for what they say however much you hate their words then you have changed the rules of war. And that is what Nato did from April through to June of 1999. They changed the rules of war. A military barracks was a legitimate target. Then a tobacco factory, a road bridge,
the railway line at Gurdulice just when a train was crossing the bridge.
Interestingly enough, Human Rights Watch quotes General Wesley Clark, Nato's commander, saying of the pilot's video footage of
the passenger train racing over the Gurdulice bridge that "you can see if you were focusing right on your job as a pilot, how suddenly that train appeared it was really unfortunate". But the
human rights organisation appears ignorant of recent revelations that Nato deliberately speeded up the video film for its press audience to three times the train's actual speed.
The train did not appear "suddenly" as General Clark mendaciously claimed. It was travelling much more slowly. And despite Human Rights Watch's claims to have interviewed so many Yugoslav survivors of air attacks their work is indeed impressive the group seems unaware that several survivors of the train attack say they saw the aircraft return for a second strike. Indeed,
the evidence at the scene showed how the first bomb smashed a road bridge above the track, cutting the electrical wires and stopping the train. A second missile then hit the carriages.
It was not a war crime, Human Rights Watch says. In fact, Nato committed no war crimes, according to Kenneth Roth and his
investigators. But it committed "violations of international humanitarian law" which amounts to about the same thing. And still we don't know who bombed what. Survivors believe the train
was attacked by a British Harrier. The report says it was an American jet. The Yugoslavs say the plane that bombed the centre of Aleksinac in April was British based on intercepted pilot
radio messages yet still we don't know.
In the New Year Honours List, Britain's Kosovo pilots got their gongs. All their names were printed in The Independent although we have no idea who was rewarded for their role in Nato's sloppy bombing campaign Nato failed to hit more than a handful of Serb tanks throughout the war and the Yugoslav Third Army retired unscratched from Kosovo or who was bemedalled for watching the radar tracks.
Last September, an unnoticed article in The Officer, a magazine widely read by Ministry of Defence officials and senior army NCOs, quoted a British Harrier pilot who had been bombing Serbia the previous April.
"After a while you've got to ignore the collateral damage [civilian casualties] and start smashing those targets," he said at the time. "But the politicians aren't ready for that yet."
They soon were.
HEY EVERYONE, ITS MR. PRESIDENT HERE. I HAVE JUST STARTED MY OWN BUZINESS AND I WAS WONDERING IF ANYONE WAS INTERESTED. IF YES, I CAN POST MY WEBSITE.
konbanwa, k-san ('kissie' to you, dimitri, thank you; go play w/hairy mary...heh...)...
i'm sitting there reading this stuff and i get to the matthesson/bacon spew, and i realize "this is mattehesson!" and a moment later i see you've said the same. yep, absolutely.
oh what a man you are, matthesson, to have returned to hassle kissie with your stoopit, stoopit (expletive). performed in such an obvious way that your intended target (and me, and others) realizes who you are.
but maybe when barafi the barking mouth shows up, he'll approve of and speak up for your woman-hating and anti-semitism, and you and he will become good pals, BWAHHH-HA-HAAAAA! at least until you launch into your 'beggar bowl' routine, lolololol
yeah, i think it's pretty funny to imagine bacon, barafi, and URN in the same room. too bad for you, URN. gotta watch how you select your associates.
WARNING: individuals harrassing kissie run the risk of being banned from here.
barufi,
why is it always capital letters with you?
by the way, i'll report this abuse of yours to administration. we'll see if it makes any difference, but take note that i took the action against you.
whatsamatter, loudmouth, cant anyone have an opinion here but you? you hypocrite who fantasizes of destroying america while living in america, getting obese from fast food. another lonely man, like matthesson, staring at the screen all night...making noise...blah blah zzzz....
i laugh at your threats of violence to me or anyone else. you're like bluto from POPEYE.
but it's early yet; i'm sure you'll be vomiting for quite awhile. you tend to.
blah blah zzzz
blah blah zzzz
Russians eat dirty snow to get drunk ....
Aíòèàëêîãîëüíàÿ âîéíà ñ ñîâåòñêèì íàðîäîì â 1985 ãîäó...
 òîò ãîä ÿ ðàáîòàë â ìèëèöèè Ìîñêîâñêîé îáëàñòè. Êàê ïðåäñòàâèòåëü ãëàâêà â "ïîðÿäêå êîíòðîëÿ" áûë íàïðàâëåí â îäèí èç ðàéîíîâ Ïîäìîñêîâüÿ íà ëèêâèäàöèþ áîëüøîé ïàðòèè èçúÿòîãî ñàìîãîíà. Óíè÷òîæàòü ñàìîãîí ïðèâåçëè ìåñòíûõ 15-ñóòî÷íèêîâ. Ñî ñæàòûìè ñêóëàìè ïîä íàäçîðîì ìèëèöèè è ðàéêîìà ïàðòèè îíè âûëèëè â ñíåã ñîäåðæèìîå íåñêîëüêèõ òûñÿ÷ áóòûëîê. Êîãäà äåëî áûëî ñäåëàíî, ñòàðøèé ñðåäè "ëèêâèäàòîðîâ" ïîäîøåë ê èíñòðóêòîðó ðàéêîìà è ïîïðîñèë: "Íà÷àëüíèê, áóäü ÷åëîâåêîì, äàé ñíåæêó ïîåñòü!" È ëþäè åëè ñíåã, ïðîïèòàííûé ñàìîãîíîì.
Ïîëíûé Êîøìàí
 Ñàìàøêàõ ïðåäñòàâèòåëÿ ïðåçèäåíòà âñòðåòèëè ïðîõëàäíî. Íå áûëî äðîâ. Äà è æåëàíèÿ
Êîãäà-òî, åùå äî ïåðâîé âîéíû, â Ñàìàøêàõ áûëî ÷åòûðå øêîëû. Íà ìåñòå äâóõ èç íèõ — îãðîìíûå ïóñòûðè, òðåòüþ çàíÿëà êîìåíäàòóðà ôåäåðàëüíûõ âîéñê. Åäèíñòâåííàÿ øêîëà, êîòîðàÿ ðàáîòàåò ñåãîäíÿ â Ñàìàøêàõ, — òàê íàçûâàåìàÿ “íîâàÿ” øêîëà (íîâàÿ ïîòîìó, ÷òî áûëà ïîñòðîåíà çíà÷èòåëüíî ïîçæå îñòàëüíûõ, â êîíöå ñåìèäåñÿòûõ). Ðàçðóøåííàÿ â àïðåëå 95-ãî âî âðåìÿ ïå÷àëüíî èçâåñòíîé çà÷èñòêè è çàíîâî îòñòðîåííàÿ â òîì æå ãîäó çàåçæèìè ñòðîèòåëÿìè èç ñîñåäíåé Êàáàðäèíî-Áàëêàðèè, îíà âíîâü îòêðûëàñü íåñêîëüêî íåäåëü íàçàä èñêëþ÷èòåëüíî áëàãîäàðÿ ýíòóçèàçìó ðóêîâîäñòâà è ïåäàãîãè÷åñêîãî êîëëåêòèâà.
Âîîáùå ó÷èòåëÿ â ×å÷íå — ýòî ñàìàÿ óíèêàëüíàÿ êàñòà. Ìåñÿöàìè, à íåðåäêî è ãîäàìè íå ïîëó÷àÿ çàðïëàòû, â íåîòàïëèâàþùèõñÿ ïîëóðàçðóøåííûõ ïîìåùåíèÿõ îíè óìóäðÿþòñÿ ñ ïîðàçèòåëüíûì ìíîãîòåðïåíèåì õîäèòü íà ðàáîòó. Íà èçíóðèòåëüíóþ ðàáîòó — ñ íàïóãàííûìè çàòðàâëåííûìè äåòüìè, êîòîðûå â ñâîåé æèçíè âèäåëè òîëüêî âîéíû, ñìåðòü è ãîëîä.
 êîíöå ÿ0íâàðÿ Ñàìàøêè ïîñåòèë ïðåäñòàâèòåëü ïðåçèäåíòà â ×å÷íå Í. Êîøìàí. Íàäî ñêàçàòü, ÷òî æèòåëè Ñàìàøåê, ïåðåæèâøèå òðè øòóðìà âî âðåìÿ ïðîøëîé âîéíû è îäèí, íî î-î÷åíü ïàìÿòíûé øòóðì â ðàìêàõ “àíòèòåððîðèñòè÷åñêîé îïåðàöèè”, íàäîëãî çàïîìíÿò ýòîò âèçèò. Ñîïðîâîæäàåìûé êîëîííîé èç òàíêîâ è ÁÒÐîâ, íåñêîëüêèõ “óàçèêîâ” ñ îìîíîâöàìè, ïðèêðûâàåìûé ñ âîçäóõà äâóìÿ ñòðàøåííûìè âåðòîëåòàìè, ÷óòü íå çàäåâàâøèìè êðûøè, ïðåäñòàâèòåëü ïðåçèäåíòà òîðæåñòâåííî âúåõàë âî âìèã îöåïëåííîå áðàâûìè îìîíîâöàìè ñåëî.
×òî èíòåðåñíî, íè î êàêîì âèçèòå æèòåëåé ñåëà äàæå íå ïðåäóïðåäèëè. Íåóäèâèòåëüíî, ÷òî ëþäè, ïðèâûêøèå ê ðåãóëÿðíûì îáëàâàì ïðîãîëîäàâøèõñÿ “çàùèòíèêîâ”, ðåøèëè, ÷òî íà÷èíàåòñÿ î÷åðåäíàÿ çà÷èñòêà. Ìèãîì îïóñòåëè óëèöû, ëþäè â óæàñå ïîïðÿòàëèñü ïî ïîäâàëàì, äåòè èñïóãàííî æàëèñü ê ìàòåðÿì — îíè íå çíàëè, ÷òî ýòî ïðîñòî èõ ãëàâíûé è ñàìûé ïîëíîìî÷íûé áëàãîäåòåëü ïðèåõàë èõ ïðîâåäàòü.
Èì, äåòÿì, íèêàê íå ïîíÿòü, ïî÷åìó æèçíü è çäîðîâüå ýòîãî ãîñïîäèíà îõðàíÿþò ñòîëüêî ëþäåé, à èõ ðîäèòåëåé, èõ áðàòüåâ è ñåñòåð, èõ çíàêîìûõ è ñîñåäåé, èõ äðóçåé è îäíîêëàññíèêîâ êàæäûé äåíü óáèâàþò è êàëå÷àò. Èì, äåòÿì, íèêàê íå ïîíÿòü ãëàâíîãî: ÷åì æèçíü ýòîãî ëîñíÿùåãîñÿ äÿäè ñ áåñòàêòíî ñûòûì íà ôîíå òîòàëüíîé ðàçðóõè ëèöîì öåííåå èõ æèçíåé, ðàâíî êàê è òîãî, êåì è ïî êàêîìó ïðèíöèïó îïðåäåëÿåòñÿ öåííîñòü òîé èëè èíîé æèçíè.
Êàê áû òî íè áûëî, ñòîëü ïîìïåçíî ïðèáûâøèé ïðåäñòàâèòåëü ïðåçèäåíòà ïîñåòèë-òàêè øêîëó, õîòÿ íàâåðíÿêà îí, âäîõíîâëåííûé âåðíîïîääàííè÷åñêèìè óëûáî÷êàìè ñîïðîâîæäàâøåãî åãî ðàéîííîãî ïðåôåêòà Øàìèëÿ Áóðàåâà (óâîëåííîãî, êñòàòè, â ñâîå âðåìÿ ïî îáâèíåíèþ â âîðîâñòâå ãîñóäàðñòâåííûõ äåíåã è âíîâü óòâåðæäåííîãî â äîëæíîñòè íîâûìè âëàñòÿìè), ðàññ÷èòûâàë íà áîëåå òåïëûé ïðèåì. Óâû, çäåñü íèêòî çàèñêèâàþùå íå çàãëÿäûâàë â ãëàçà âñåñèëüíîìó ïîëïðåäó, íèêòî íå ñïðàøèâàë ñ òåàòðàëüíûìè íîòàìè â ãîëîñå çíàìåíèòîå: “Âû íå óéäåòå? Âû íå áðîñèòå íàñ ñíîâà?”.
Íà èìïðîâèçèðîâàííîì ñõîäå ìåñòíûõ æèòåëåé ïåðåä ñåëüñîâåòîì, ãäå Êîøìàí îñòàíîâèëñÿ ïî äîðîãå â øêîëó, ëþäè ñòàëè òðåáîâàòü, ÷òîáû îí óáðàëñÿ èç ñåëà, íå òðàâèë è áåç òîãî çàòðàâëåííûõ æèòåëåé.
— ×òî âû ìîæåòå ñ ñîáîé ïðèâåçòè õîðîøåãî, åñëè îäèí âàø ïðèåçä âìåñòå ñ öåëîé äèâèçèåé îõðàíû äî ñìåðòè ïåðåïóãàë âñåõ äåòåé â ñåëå? — êðè÷àëà îäíà ìîëîäàÿ æåíùèíà.
Áóëàò Èíäåðáàåâ, ÷åé áðàò âìåñòå ñ íåñêîëüêèìè ñîñåäÿìè â àïðåëå 1995 ã. áûë çàæèâî ñîææåí ïüÿíûìè îìîíîâöàìè (ðå÷ü èäåò î òîé ñàìîé çà÷èñòêå Ñàìàøåê), ïðÿìî ñêàçàë:
— Íèêîãäà âàì íå áóäåò ïîêîÿ íà íàøåé çåìëå. Âû äóìàåòå, ÿ âàì êîãäà-íèáóäü ïðîùó ìîåãî áðàòà? Âû ïîñìîòðèòå, ñêîëüêî âîîðóæåííûõ äî çóáîâ ìîëîä÷èêîâ âàñ îõðàíÿåò, è ïîñìîòðèòå íà íàñ, áåçîðóæíûõ. À âåäü âû âñå ðàâíî áîèòåñü íàñ. È ïðàâèëüíî äåëàåòå, ïîòîìó ÷òî ñ âàøèì ïðèñóòñòâèåì ìû íèêîãäà íå ñìèðèìñÿ.
Äîøëî äî òîãî, ÷òî Øàìèëü Áóðàåâ, èçâåñòíûé ñâîåé íåæíîé äðóæáîé ñ ãåíåðàëîì Øàìàíîâûì, ïðåôåêò À÷õîé-Ìàðòàíîâñêîãî ðàéîíà, äëÿ êîòîðîãî ýòîò êîíôóç ãðîçèë îáåðíóòüñÿ êðóïíûìè íåïðèÿòíîñòÿìè, â êîíöå êîíöîâ íå âûäåðæàë è çàêðè÷àë ñðûâàþùèìñÿ èñòåðè÷íûì ôàëüöåòîì:
— Äà òû âîîáùå çíàåøü, ñ êåì òû ãîâîðèøü?
— Çíàþ ïðåêðàñíî, êàê çíàþ è òî, ÷òî òàêèõ, êàê òû, â òþðüìå âîçëå ïàðàøè äåðæàò, — ïîñëåäîâàë îòâåò.
Ïðèìå÷àòåëüíî, ÷òî âî âðåìÿ âñåãî ýòîãî ðàçãîâîðà Íèêîëàé Êîøìàí, ïîäîáíî Âèííè-Ïóõó, ïðèòâîðÿâøåìóñÿ òó÷êîé, ñòîÿë ñî ñêó÷àþùèì âèäîì, êàê áóäòî ïðîèñõîäÿùåå ê íåìó íå èìåëî íèêàêîãî îòíîøåíèÿ.
 ñàìîé øêîëå, êóäà âûñîêàÿ äåëåãàöèÿ íàêîíåö-òî ïðèáûëà, ãîñòåé îæèäàë íå ìåíåå õîëîäíûé ïðèåì. Îäíà ìîëîäàÿ ó÷èòåëüíèöà, êîòîðîé Í. Êîøìàí, ñòîëêíóâøèñü â äâåðÿõ, ïðîòÿíóë ðóêó è ñêàçàë: “Çäðàâñòâóéòå”, ïðîöåäèëà ñêâîçü çóáû: “Äî ñâèäàíèÿ”, ðåçêî ïîâåðíóëàñü è ïîøëà ïðî÷ü. (Êñòàòè, ìóæ÷èíà, ïðîòÿãèâàþùèé ÷å÷åíñêîé æåíùèíå ðóêó â ïàòðèàðõàëüíîì ñåëå â ïðèñóòñòâèè íåñêîëüêèõ äåñÿòêîâ ñâèäåòåëåé, âûãëÿäèò î÷åíü âóëüãàðíî è íåòàêòè÷íî äàæå äëÿ íîâîé âëàñòè è íàãëÿäíî äåìîíñòðèðóåò, íàñêîëüêî äàëåêè îò ðåàëüíîñòè ïðåäñòàâëåíèÿ ýòèõ ëþäåé î íàðîäå, êîòîðûé îíè âçÿëèñü îñ÷àñòëèâèòü.) Ó ýòîé ó÷èòåëüíèöû ôåäåðàëû ñîæãëè äîì íà Ñòåïíîé óëèöå. Ñîëäàòû ñòîÿëè âî äâîðå äî òåõ ïîð, ïîêà äîì íå ñãîðåë äîòëà, è ïèëè âîäêó íà êðûøêå ëþêà, â êîòîðîì îíà âìåñòå ñ ðîäñòâåííèêàìè ñèäåëà, çàòàèâ äûõàíèå. Îò ó÷àñòè ñîææåííûõ â ïîäâàëàõ îäíîñåëü÷àí èõ ñïàñëî òîëüêî òî, ÷òî íè îäèí èç íàõîäèâøèõñÿ ñ íèìè äåòåé íå çàïëàêàë...
Âêîíåö ðàññòðîåííûé ïîëïðåä ïîñïåøíî îñìîòðåë øêîëó, â êîòîðîé è âïðÿìü íå áûëî äåòåé, ïîäàëüøå îò ãðåõà îòêàçàëñÿ îò çàïëàíèðîâàííîé âñòðå÷è ñ êîëëåêòèâîì, ïîáëàãîäàðèâ, îäíàêî, äèðåêòîðà çà ðàáîòó â òàêèõ òðóäíûõ óñëîâèÿõ, îáåùàë â ñðî÷íîì ïîðÿäêå ïðîèçâåñòè â øêîëå êàïèòàëüíûé ðåìîíò. È, ñàìîå ãëàâíîå, îáåùàë äî 28 ÿíâàðÿ âûïëàòèòü ó÷èòåëÿì çàðïëàòó.
Âûñîêàÿ äåëåãàöèÿ óåõàëà. Íàñòóïèëî è ïðîøëî 28 ÿíâàðÿ, íî íè î çàðïëàòå, íè òåì áîëåå î ðåìîíòå çäåñü áîëüøå íèêòî íå ñëûøàë. Çàòî ÷åðåç íåñêîëüêî äíåé ïîñëå âèçèòà Í. Êîøìàíà, à èìåííî 1 ôåâðàëÿ, ïðèìåðíî â 16 ÷àñîâ Ñàìàøêè áûëè ïîäâåðãíóòû î÷åðåäíîìó îáñòðåëó, òåïåðü óæå âåðòîëåòíîìó.  ðåçóëüòàòå ðàíåíû íåñêîëüêî ÷åëîâåê: Òåðëîåâà Ìàííà, ïðîæèâàþùàÿ ïî óëèöå Âûãîííàÿ, 102, ðàíåíà â ëèöî è ñïèíó, äâîå åå äåòåé ïîëó÷èëè ëåãêèå ðàíåíèÿ. Âñå îíè íàõîäèëèñü â äîìå, êîãäà ðàêåòà óãîäèëà ïðÿìî íà êðûøó.  íîãó áûë ðàíåí Ýëüìóðçàåâ Àñëàí, ìèðíî ïðîãóëèâàâøèéñÿ ïî óëèöå. Ðàçðóøåíû äîìà ïî óëèöàì Ëåðèïîâà, Âûãîííàÿ, Ëåíèíà.
Îäíà èç ðàêåò ïðèçåìëèëàñü êàê ðàç âîçëå øêîëû, òîé ñàìîé, êîòîðóþ ïîñåòèë Í. Êîøìàí. Ïîñûïàëèñü îêîííûå ñòåêëà, äåòè (à â ìîìåíò îáñòðåëà â øêîëå øëè çàíÿòèÿ) â óæàñå ïîâûñêàêèâàëè íà óëèöó è ñïðÿòàëèñü â ïîäâàëàõ áëèçëåæàùèõ äîìîâ...
Íà ñëåäóþùèé äåíü â ñåëî ïî òðàäèöèè ïðèåõàë ïðåäñòàâèòåëü êîìåíäàòóðû è çàÿâèë, ÷òî âåðòîëåòû îíè íå âûçûâàëè è âîîáùå îòâåòñòâåííîñòè çà ýòîò îáñòðåë íå íåñóò íèêàêîé, ïîñêîëüêó íå çíàþò, ÷òî ýòî áûëè çà âåðòîëåòû è êàêóþ çàäà÷ó îíè âûïîëíÿëè. “Ìû ñàìè áûëè â ïîëíîì íåäîóìåíèè, âåäü íàì îò ïîäîáíûõ îáñòðåëîâ ãðîçèò òàêàÿ æå îïàñíîñòü, êàê è âàì, ìû âåäü òîæå æèâåì ñ âàìè â ýòîì ñåëå. À ÷òî êàñàåòñÿ ëåñà, òî äà, ìû óñèëèëè ìèíîìåòíûé îáñòðåë ëåñà. Äàâàéòå ñ âàìè ïðèçíàåì îäèí î÷åíü ñóùåñòâåííûé ôàêò: ëåñ áûë è åñòü, â ëåñó áûëè è åñòü, è äàâàéòå çàêîí÷èì íà ýòîì”, — âûäàâ ýòîò áîëåå ÷åì ñòðàííûé îáðàçåö êðàñíîðå÷èÿ, âîåííûé îáåùàë è âïðåäü òàêæå óñåðäíî îõðàíÿòü ñåëî è “îáðàáàòûâàòü” ëåñ, êñòàòè, âïëîòíóþ ïðèëåãàþùèé ê ñåëó.
Ïðåäñòàâèòåëü êîìåíäàòóðû “ïîîáùàëñÿ” åùå íåìíîãî ñ ñåëü÷àíàìè è óåõàë.
Óåõàëà è ÿ. Åõàòü ìíå ïðåäñòîÿëî íåñêîëüêî êèëîìåòðîâ ïî äîðîãå, ïðîõîäÿùåé ÷åðåç òîò ñàìûé çëîïîëó÷íûé ëåñ, è íå áûëî íèêàêîé óâåðåííîñòè, ÷òî íåèçâåñòíî ÷üè âåðòîëåòû, âûïîëíÿþùèå íåèçâåñòíî êàêóþ çàäà÷ó, íå ïåðåïóòàþò ìåíÿ ñ òåìè, êòî, ïî ñëîâàì âîåííûõ, “áûëè è åñòü â ëåñó”.
"Íîâàÿ Ãàçåòà"