Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 8 – Today, as
they have for many of the last 21 years, the victims and relatives of victims
of the September 1999 apartment bombing in Moscow assembled to remember those
who were lost and those who are still suffering from that explosion and from
three other apartment bombings elsewhere in Russia that week.
Their meeting was tinged with anger
because despite their efforts singly and together with other victims of
terrorism in the Russian Federation, they have not received special assistance
from the government and only two months ago, the powers pulled from
consideration a draft law that would have given them some (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/353930/).
These apartment bombings, which
Vladimir Putin blamed on the Chechens and exploited to power his rise to the
presidency, remain a matter of dispute. Most independent experts abroad have
concluded that the FSB was behind them, something that strongly suggests Putin
himself gave the order for the deaths of hundreds of Russian citizens.
But investigations in Russia have
refused to go beyond the Kremlin’s claims of Chechen complicity or have
concluded that the available evidence does not permit any final conclusion. And
as a result, these horrific acts increasingly are ignored in the single stream
of Russian history Putin has been promoting.
That is bad enough, but it is especially
disgusting that Putin’s government has not taken action to help the victims,
many of whom still suffer from physical and mental disabilities as a result of
the explosions. The Kremlin leader has sometimes suggested that their plight should
be investigated, but in July, proposals to do so with a new law were withdrawn.
Consequently, it seems likely that
the Putin regime which used these explosions to re-launch its vicious war on
Chechnya has now used the attention Russians are naturally focusing on the
coronavirus pandemic as an occasion for sweeping the 1999 events further under
the carpet.
By doing so, the Kremlin leader is
compounding his crimes of that year. Any failure to hold him accountable both
for his role in orchestrating the explosions and for his unwillingness to help
those the explosions harmed so much can only be described as despicable.
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