
Sources of Kavkaz Center in Chechnya report a noticeable increase in military presence of invaders and puppets in the capital Jokhar.
According to the sources, on the eve of the dramatized Kadyrov's sabbath performance named "100 days" in which thousands students, schoolboys and employees of puppet structures were engaged, additional military troops and armored vehicles had been brought into the Chechen capital. All approaches to the city are reinforced by additional units, armored troop-carriers and BMPs. Mobile checkpoint were set up.
Regular large-scale "cleansing operations" were carired out practically in all areas of the capital before and after the dramatized sabbath performance. Retaliatory raids took place in nearby villages and in districts of settlements of Urus-Martan, Achhoy-Martan, Grozny-Selsk, Vedeno, Nojay-Yurt, Shali, and Kurchaloi.
Relatives and parents of puppet police officers told their friends that occupation structures are expecting serious troubles. Many high-ranking puppets moved their families to Moscow and other Russian cities. In private conversations employees of various occupation departments and services tell about possible forthcoming heavy clashes for Jokhar, and five thousand Mujahideen are thought to have already infiltrated into the capital.
Russian mass-media also reports on nervous feelings among invaders and puppets. Russian media assumes that as a result of a possible future military operation of Mujahideen, the control of the Chechen capital could pass over to CRI government forces.
Interestingly enough, several puppet leaders of the pro-Russian Chechen Republic's Interior Ministry admit that an offer was really made by Kremlin to Mujahideen in connection with the forthcoming G8 summit in St.Petersburg, and that preliminary agreements in this connection have been already reached (Moscow reportedly asked the Mujahideen not to conduct large-scale operations for the period of the summit, especially in St.Petersburg, promising in the return some interesting bargains).
In addition, local puppets and invaders admit that this spring's military activity of Mujahideen is considerably higher than last year, and it worries and makes nervous the Russian occupation command.
Musa Stone,
Kavkaz Center