Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis

Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis
Part of the First Chechen War
Hostages released from the hospital at Budyonnovsk
LocationBudyonnovsk, Stavropol Krai, Russia
Coordinates44°47′02″N 44°09′57″E / 44.7839°N 44.1658°E / 44.7839; 44.1658
Date14–19 June 1995
Attack type
Hostage crisis
Deaths129
Injured415
PerpetratorsChechen separatists led by Shamil Basayev and Aslambek Abdulkhadzhiev
MotiveForcing ceasefire in the war, securing safe return to Chechnya
Location of Stavropol Krai territory on the map of Russia

The Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis (Russian: Теракт в Будённовске, teract [terrorist act] in Budyonnovsk) took place from 14 to 19 June 1995, when a group of Chechen separatists led by Shamil Basayev attacked the southern Russian city of Budyonnovsk (alternatively transliterated as Budennovsk) near the breakaway Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, during the First Chechen War of 1994–1996. After brief fighting in the city, Basayev and his men took over a local hospital complex where they gathered over 2,000 mostly civilian hostages, demanding a ceasefire in Chechnya and the resumption of Russian negotiations with Chechen leadership. Following several failed attempts by the Russian government to respond to the situation by force, Russian prime minister Viktor Chernomyrdin personally agreed to Basayev's demands, securing the release of the hostages. The terrorist act in Budyonnovsk was the first hostage crisis in modern Russian history.

Initial attack

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Shamil Basayev's group of more than 100 Chechen separatist smertniki (ready to die) fighters crossed from the south of embattled Chechnya through the Russian republic of Dagestan into the Russian republic of Stavropol Krai. They concealed themselves in a column of three KamAZ military trucks and a police VAZ-2106 car, their drivers dressed as Russian servicemen and pretending to be bringing a "Cargo 200" load of corpses of dead Russian troops back from the war zone.

At about noon on 14 June, the column was stopped by the local police at Budyonnovsk, some 110 km north of Chechnya, and ordered to drive to the city's main police station for an inspection. Having arrived there, Chechen fighters suddenly emerged from the trucks and opened fire, storming and capturing the police headquarters as well as the city hall, and raising Chechen flags over local administration offices. Over the next several hours, as Russian reinforcements arrived, the Chechens retreated to the residential district and regrouped in the city's main hospital, taking hostages on their way. During the clashes and on the way to the hospital, the attackers killed as many as 41 people,[1] including police officers, soldiers, personnel from Budyonnovsk air base, and civilians.

Hostage crisis

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At the hospital complex, which they quickly fortified and rigged with explosives, Basayev's 119-strong[2] and well armed group held more than 2,000 people (some estimates are as high as 5,000[2]) hostage, most of them civilians, including 150 children and a number of women with newborn infants.[1] Basayev issued an ultimatum, threatening to kill the hostages unless his demands were met. These included an end to the First Chechen War, an amnesty for Chechen fighters, and direct negotiations by Russia with the representatives of Chechen president Dzokhar Dudayev.[3] He also demanded that Russian authorities immediately bring reporters to the scene and allow them to enter the Chechen position in the hospital. Russian authorities, in turn, threatened to kill 2,000 Chechen prisoners if Basayev did not surrender.[2] Russian president Boris Yeltsin immediately vowed to do everything possible to free the hostages, denouncing the attack as "unprecedented in cynicism and cruelty".[4] Over 300 hostages were released through low-level negotiations on June 14 and 15.[1]

At about 8 pm on 15 June, the Chechens killed one hostage, a military registration and enlistment official.[1] The following day, when the reporters did not arrive at the arranged time, five additional male hostages were shot to death on Basayev's order.[5] The New York Times quoted the hospital's chief doctor that "several of the Chechens had just grabbed five hostages at random and shot them to show the world they were serious in their demands that Russian troops leave their land."[6] The five men taken outside to a courtyard and shot were, according to conflicting reports, either five military helicopter pilots,[2][7] or three pilots and two policemen.[1][8] Basayev himself explained the choice of the pilots as a result of his personal "special relationship" with them,[9] referring to the death of his wife, child, and sister in an airstrike two week earlier, which he had sworn to avenge.[2] Russian security minister Sergei Stepashin called the reports of the execution "a bluff".[6] Later, however, Russian authorities relented and allowed a group of journalists to enter the hospital for a press conference, at which Basayev repeated his demands publicly.[3]

On the third day of the siege, Russian authorities ordered security forces to retake the hospital compound. The task was given to a grouping of MVD and FSB special forces, including the elite units Alfa and Vympel, supported by armored vehicles and armed helicopters. The Russians attacked at dawn of the next day (June 17), meeting fierce resistance. After several hours of fighting, in which many hostages were killed by crossfire, a local ceasefire was agreed on and Basayev released more hostages, including all pregnant women and nursing mothers with their children. A second Russian attack on the hospital a few hours later also failed, and so did a third, resulting in further casualties. The Russian authorities accused the Chechens of using the hostages as human shields. Yeltsin's human rights advisor Sergey Kovalyov described the scene: "In half an hour the hospital was burning, and it was not until the next morning that we found out what happened there as a result of this shooting. I saw with my own eyes pieces of human flesh stuck to the walls and the ceiling and burned corpses."[10] Nevertheless, some hostages had been freed by the Russian troops and Basayev soon released all remaining women and children. Both sides also agreed to the arrival of fire trucks and ambulances at the hospital in order to put out fires and evacuate the dead.[1]

Resolution of the crisis

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On 18 June, direct negotiations between Shamil Basayev and Russian prime minister Viktor Chernomyrdin led to a compromise, which ultimately became a turning point for the First Chechen War. In a televised conversation with Basayev, Chernomyrdin agreed to halt military actions in Chechnya and begin top-level talks with separatist leaders. He then signed the formal statement:

Statement of the Government of the Russian Federation.

To release the hostages who have been held in Budennovsk, the Government of Russian Federation:
1. Guarantees an immediate cessation of combat operations and bombings in the territory of Chechnya from 05 AM, 19 June 1995. Along with this action, all the children, women, elderly, sick and wounded, who have been taken hostage, should be released.
2. Appoints a delegation, authorized to negotiate the terms of the peaceful settlement of conflict in Chechnya, with V. A. Mihailov as a leader and A. I. Volsky as a deputy. Negotiations will start immediately on the 18th June 1995, as soon as the delegation arrives in Grozny. All the other issues, including a question of withdrawal of the armed forces, will be peacefully resolved at the negotiating table.
3. After all the other hostages are released, will provide Sh. Basayev and his group with transport and secure their transportation from the scene to Chechen territory.
4. Delegates the authorised representatives of the Government of the Russia Federation A. V. Korobeinikov and V. K. Medvedickov to deliver this Statement to Sh. Basayev.

Prime Minister of the Russian Federation
V. S. Chernomirdin
18 June 1995
20:35

The agreement resulted in the release of 350 additional hostages.[1] Yeltsin meanwhile had gone to the summit of the G8 in Canada. After meeting with Yeltsin, the Group of Eight condemned violence on both sides of the Chechen conflict. When asked about the crisis by a journalist, Yeltsin denounced the rebels as ″horrible bandits with black bands on their foreheads″ (″Это оголтелые бандиты, понимаешь, с чёрными повязками″).[11]

On 19 June, all remaining hostages were released. Basayev's group, along with a group of over 100 volunteer hostages (16 journalists, nine State Duma deputies including Kovalev, Oleg Orlov, Mikhail Molostvov, Aleksandr Osovtsov, Valeriy Borshchev, Yuliy Rybakov and Viktor Borodin,[9] and numerous other government officials, medical workers, and previously released hostages) boarded six buses and traveled to Chechnya through North Ossetia and Dagestan. Despite a rogue plot by interior ministry general Anatoly Kulikov to eliminate Basayev in an ambush at the blocked Chechen border,[12] the bus convoy eventually reached the Chechen settlement of Zandak near the border with Dagestan. The volunteer hostages were then released, while Basayev, accompanied by some of the journalists, went on to the southern Chechen village of Dargo, Vedensky District, where he was welcomed as a hero.[citation needed]

Casualties and damage

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According to official figures, at least 129 people were killed and 415 were injured (including 18 who later died of their wounds) as a result of the attack.[13] One official death toll included 105 civilian, 11 police and at least 14 military fatalities.[8] However, according to an independent estimate, as many as 166 hostages were killed and 541 injured in the special forces assault on the hospital.[14][15] A report submitted by Russia to the Council of Europe stated that a total of 130 civilians, 18 policemen, and 17 soldiers had been killed, and more than 400 people had been wounded.[16] Of Basayev's forces, 11 men were killed and one went missing; most of the bodies were eventually returned to Chechnya in a refrigerator truck.[citation needed]

Over 160 buildings in the town were destroyed or damaged during the crisis, including 54 municipal buildings and 110 private houses.[13][17] Many of the former hostages suffered psychological trauma and were treated at a special facility in Budyonnovsk.[citation needed]

Aftermath

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The government's handling of the hostage crisis was perceived as inept by many Russians. The State Duma passed a motion of no confidence by a vote of 241 to 72; however, this was seen as purely symbolic, and the government did not resign. The debacle ultimately led to the resignations of FSB director Sergei Stepashin and interior minister Viktor Yerin on 30 June 1995.

The raid is widely seen as the turning point in the war[by whom?]. It boosted morale among the hard-pressed Chechen separatists, shocked the Russian public, and discredited the Russian government. The negotiations sparked by the attack provided the Chechens with time to regroup and rearm. After peace talks broke down and hostilities resumed, Russian forces never truly regained a position of strength, and the war concluded in August 1996 with a Chechen military victory.

In the years following the hostage crisis, more than 40 of the surviving attackers were tracked down and killed, including Aslambek Abdulkhadzhiev in 2002 and Basayev in 2006. At least 20 were sentenced by the Stavropol territorial court to various terms of imprisonment.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Dolnik, Adam; Fitzgerald, Keith M. (30 November 2007). Negotiating Hostage Crises with the New Terrorists. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-0-275-99749-6. Archived from the original on 8 August 2024. Retrieved 8 August 2024 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b c d e Williams, Brian Glyn (22 September 2015). Inferno in Chechnya: The Russian-Chechen Wars, the Al Qaeda Myth, and the Boston Marathon Bombings. University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-61168-801-6. Archived from the original on 9 August 2024. Retrieved 9 August 2024 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b Felkay, Andrew (30 May 2002). Yeltsin's Russia and the West. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-0-313-01384-3 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "Assault at High Noon", Time, 26 June 1995.
  5. ^ Cassational definition of the Supreme Court of Russia[permanent dead link], 19 March 2003, N 19-kp002-98 (in Russian).
  6. ^ a b Specter, Michael (16 June 1995). "Chechen Rebels Said to Kill Hostages at Russian Hospital". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 5 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  7. ^ Shultz, Richard H.; Dew, Andrea J. (9 August 2009). Insurgents, Terrorists, and Militias: The Warriors of Contemporary Combat. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12983-1. Archived from the original on 8 August 2024. Retrieved 8 August 2024 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ a b "Буденновск". Archived from the original on 6 October 2014.
  9. ^ a b "Daily Report: Central Eurasia". The Service. 9 August 1995 – via Google Books.
  10. ^ "The Caucasus and the Caspian: 1996-1998 Seminar Series". Harvard University, John F. Kennedy School of Government. 9 August 1998 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ "Yeltsin: Rebels 'Terrorists and Bandits'". The Daily News. Bowling Green. 18 June 1995. Archived from the original on 21 March 2017. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  12. ^ Pokalova, Elena E. (10 February 2015). Chechnya's Terrorist Network: The Evolution of Terrorism in Russia's North Caucasus. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-4408-3155-3. Archived from the original on 9 August 2024. Retrieved 9 August 2024 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ a b History of Chechen rebels' hostage taking Archived 11 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Gazeta.Ru, 24 October 2002.
  14. ^ Russia: A Timeline Of Terrorism Since 1995 Archived 10 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 30 August 2006.
  15. ^ Adam Dolnik, Understanding Terrorist Innovation: Technology, Tactics and Global Trends, 2007 (p. 105).
  16. ^ Documents, working papers – Council of Europe, Parliamentary Assembly – 2000, volume 2.
  17. ^ Day of remembrance for victims of Chechen rebel group's attack on Budyonnovsk hospital Archived 27 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Pravda, 14 June 2004.