Russian colonel who killed Chechen woman shot dead in Moscow

Mabsoot

Amir
Staff member
Russian colonel who killed Chechen woman shot dead in Moscow
Source: The Guardian

Russian-colonel-Yuri-Buda-007.jpg



A former army officer who tortured and killed a young woman in one of the most notorious crimes of the Kremlin's "dirty war" in Chechnya, was murdered in Moscow.

Yuri Budanov, 47, a former tank commander – lauded by Russian nationalists, but reviled in Chechnya – was shot four times in the head by bullets fired from a silenced pistol. His body could be seen slumped on a pathway next to a playground.

The attacker had apparently waited in a white Mitsubishi Lancer, which was driven by an accomplice and later found abandoned on a nearby street.

Budanov, 47, was jailed for 10 years in 2003 for the kidnapping and killing three years earlier of Elza Kungayeva, 18, in 2000, but was controversially released on parole in 2009.

Suspicion is likely to point to Chechnya, the Muslim region in southern Russia where two wars raged in the 1990s and early 2000s after separatists clashed with federal forces.

Budanov was the most notorious of a handful of officers to face justice for Moscow's campaign of terror. The ill-disciplined military was responsible for numerous rapes, beatings and extra-judicial executions of civilians during the two campaigns.

However, in an interview with Russian media Visa Kungayev, Elza's father, who now lives with his family in Norway, said Budanov's death was not connected to his family's tragedy. "A dog dies a dog's death," he said.

Kungayev said Chechen tradition dictated that if anyone were to take revenge it should have been him. "I'm a strictly law-abiding person… if I didn't respect the law then I would have gone and killed himself," he said. "But I didn't want that. That's why I moved to Norway, to get away from that."

Budanov, a colonel in a tank regiment, abducted Kungayeva in March 2000, after spending a drunken evening celebrating his daughter's birthday. He and his soldiers drove an armoured personnel carrier into the garden of her family's home in the village of Tangi Chu, stormed into the house and dragged her off.

Budanov took Kungayeva to his quarters in a railway carriage where he put on loud rock music. He then tortured the teenager – soldiers nearby heard muffled screams — before strangling her and ordering his subordinates to bury her naked corpse in a shallow grave.

Budanov's relatively lenient sentence of 10 years caused disgust among a vocal minority in Russia. By comparison, Mikhail Khodorkovksky, the oil tycoon, was given eight years behind bars on fraud charges in 2005, and 14 years in a recent second trial for embezzlement.

A tale of depravity

It was winter 2002 and Chechen refugees were living in a field of petrified mud in the Russian republic of Ingushetia.

For the Kungayev family, as for countless others all around them, home was a single, mouldering canvas tent with a fringe of icicles hanging from the makeshift porch.

Tens of thousands of civilians had fled to such camps after the Russian army swept into Chechnya, a few miles to the east, two years earlier. Many told tales of horror about the invasion: brothers detained and submitted to electric shocks; sons whisked from their beds and never seen again.

But Visa Kungayev's story exceeded them all in sheer depravity. Inside his tent I met him and his wife, Roza, sitting on a bench under a single flickering bulb.

Visa pulled out a shiny black folio. "Here is my girl after they dug up her body," he said, showing a photograph of the battered face of a dead teenager, a sheet drawn to her neck.

The teenage Elza — known in the family as Kheda – had been kidnapped in spring 2000 by the Russian tank commander, . His name was Yury Budanov.

In the picture, Elza'sher face and chest were pockmarked. "That's where he ground out his cigarettes on her skin," said Visa.

Budanov was then on trial in Rostov-on-Don, and despite death threats, Visa and Roza were pushing for his conviction. "Every day I relive the night when my eldest daughter was raped and murdered."
 

queenislam

★★★I LOVE ALLAH★★★
:salam2:


Pity the girl though.

He got 10 years !
Justice was serve
by some that think
he didn't pay enough!:angryred:

~May Allah swt help and protect us~Amin!

Thank you for sharing
this News
brother.
:jazaak:

Take care!
~Wassalam
 

sister herb

Official TTI Chef
In islam killing is crime.

"Russian colonel who killed Chechen woman shot dead in Moscow"

May Allah be mercy to this woman as well this killer.
 

JenGiove

Junior Member
Shahnazz said:
"A dog dies a dog's death."

Couldn't have said it better myself.

sister harb said:
He was human, not dog.

Sister Harb,

I know I was neglectful in reading the whole article and I'm wondering if maybe you missed the quote as well. Those words were said by the girl's grieving father and are understandable but he later said:

Kungayev said Chechen tradition dictated that if anyone were to take revenge it should have been him. "I'm a strictly law-abiding person… if I didn't respect the law then I would have gone and killed himself," he said. "But I didn't want that. That's why I moved to Norway, to get away from that."

I can understand the father's feelings of pain and anger but he also applaud the man for being the better person and allowing the law be the law. May Allah remember him and his family and my heart hurts at even imagining what that poor teen went through.
 

Idris16

Junior Member
In islam killing is crime.

"Russian colonel who killed Chechen woman shot dead in Moscow"

May Allah be mercy to this woman as well this killer.
We make Du`â for their guidance not mercy. Because they do shirk and kufr, which is NOT acceptable. May Allâh be mercy to the woman.

Alhamdulillâh about the good news. But one thing, this is not the end, there are still Russians in Caucausus. I have heard some news from Kavkaz that Russia are about to be destroyed, corruption in the country. Many racists there.
 

Just a Guy

Reinventing Myself
:salam2: New brother...

I think it's because of najis that the comment was made...:) I could be wrong though.

Yeah, I read the story and I understand the sentiment coming from the girl's father.

I happen to like dogs, so I think that's an insult to dogs to compare any human to a dog.

So what's the situation in Chechnya now? Are they still fighting for independence?
 

ShahnazZ

Striving2BeAStranger
He was human, not dog.

You're right about him not being a dog; he was actually WORSE than a dog. In fact, dogs are done an injustice when compared to that sick monster.

My sister in Islam was brutally tortured and raped by that pitiful excuse for a "human being" and being referred to as a human being is too good for him.

You argue that he was human. So was she. If he's human, what does that make her? Are they the same?

As for dying a dog's death, if you find such offense with that statement, go argue with the man who made it. Her father. You know, the guy whose daughter was raped? Ask him if his daughter's torturer was human.

I'm sure it'll be a lovely debate.
 

sister herb

Official TTI Chef
:salam2:

At my work I meet daily tortured people. Refugees. Raped.

It is my job to talk with them.

Don´t come to tell what it is.
 

ilyas_eh

Used to be active here!
Sorry I can´t never take part of kind of debate. I am officer in my country and can´t talk what people have told me in private.

assalaamu alaykkum wa rahmathullah,

with whatever service you are doing, masha Allah, you might know what that sister might have gone through.

If he is alive and repented for his action, whatever you are saying is correct. But that beast died the death of a kuffar. Why raising voice for him? While it is wrong for a citizen to take law in his hands, it is NOT AT ALL OK to show sympathy to one who transgressed the very limits of HUMANITY, which you are arguing about. And that too against a sister! I am sure even a brother could have a glimpse of understanding about what it means.

By the way, sister Shahnaz is also into counseling, she might have heard what exactly you have heard. But none of us can really understand the trauma that the sister or her family went through.

I hope you have mercy, as you are having now, but apply some common sense as well, insha Allah. No one can be more merciful than Ar-Rahman, however hard one can try and He in His vast wisdom prescribed death for killing.
*no offense intended, wallahi*

With all that i said, I hope may Allah make you enter Jannat-al-Firdaus for the service you have been doing to the victims of violence.

wassalaamu alaykkum wa rahmathullah
 
Top