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8 April 2009 Khaleej Times -- The deputy prime
minister of Chechnya is being sought by Dubai Police
for `masterminding' the killing of former rebel leader
Sulim Yamadayev.
Dubai Police Chief Dhahi Khalfan Tamim said that Adam
Delimkhanov brought a pistol into the UAE while on an
official state visit, and that pistol was later used
in the murder.
"There is no immunity for the mastermind of this
crime, or for the killer himself," Tamim told
reporters on Sunday. "Therefore the name of the
Chechen leader, Adam Delimkhanov, will be listed and
circulated to Interpol."
The police chief further said, "This murder was part
of the struggles that seem to happen on a daily basis
in Chechnya. It is also one which the Chechen Republic
is exporting outside its borders. These struggles
cannot be allowed to take place in Dubai."
Sulim Yamadayev was shot dead in the car park of Rimal
6, in Jumeirah Beach Residence on March 28. At the
time, police called the murder an "assassination" .
Once a fierce opponent of president Ramzan Kadyrov,
the former commander of the largest independent
militia in Chechnya fled to Dubai four months ago.
There are six suspects, including Delimkhanov, and
police already have two men in custody. The other men
have been placed on a wanted list.
Tamim said that the murder weapon was a Russian pistol
owned by Delimkhanov. "The weapon was not bought in
the UAE. We believe that Delimkhanov brought the
weapon in on a previous state visit," he added,
without specifying the date. "It was an abuse of the
diplomatic process."
Police sources said previously that Russian
authorities had been unwilling to cooperate in the
investigation. The Russian consulate was unavailable
for comment on Sunday.
Tamim said that the killer shot Yamadayev in the back
of the head and then dumped the weapon. The bloodied
gloves and shirt the killer had been wearing at the
time were dumped on The Walk in JBR, while the gun was
thrown elsewhere.
Police named the five other suspects on Sunday, but
did not say who among them might have carried out the
actual killing.
One person acted as spy, Tamim said, reporting on
Yamadayev's movements to time the killing properly.
Yamadayev had two guards with him at the time, both of
Middle Eastern origin, although neither is suspected
in the murder.
Those the police have in custody are Makhsood Jan, a
Tajik, and Mahdi Lurnia, an Iranian. Search is on for
the remaining: Zalim Khan Mazayev, a Russian, Salman
Kemaef, a Kazak, and his brother Turbal Kemaef. They
are believed to have left the country soon after the
murder. |