Slain
Boston suspect Tsarnaev may have attended terrorism seminars in
Georgia – reports
Georgia
is embroiled in scandal amid an investigation into suspicions the
country's previous government may have been involved in training
extremists. Media reports suggest the key suspect in the Boston
bombings participated in such training
29
April, 2013
“It
is possible that terrorists had been trained in Georgia, but the
investigation is underway. Let’s wait for its results. We will get
a lot of new information, maybe even some shocking findings. There
are suspicions that the authorities worked with terrorists and
militants. If this information is confirmed, this will be shocking,”
Georgian Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili said on April 28.
The
comment came in response to allegations in Russian media that
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the main suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings,
may have attended seminars allegedly sponsored by Georgian security
officials and a US-based foundation. Some of the classes reportedly
encouraged attendees to commit terrorist acts.
Georgian
Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili (RIA Novosti/Alexander
Imedashvili)
The
Kavkazsky Fund has recruited North Caucasus residents for work
serving the interests of the US and Georgia, Russian media reported.
The Fund was set up in November 2008, shortly after the
Georgia-Ossetia conflict, to “control processes taking place in
the North Caucasus region,” according to Chanturia’s report.
The
main aim of the Fund was allegedly to recruit young people in the
North Caucasus to heighten instability and extremism in Russia’s
southern region. Up to $2.5 million was allegedly allocated to
finance the Fund as of January 2013. “
To
finance the organization a monthly sum of about $20,000 was set up, ”
Chanturia said.
The
Russian media also reported that the Kavkazsky Fund has had close
ties with the US Jamestown Foundation, an “independent,
nonpartisan organization” whose mission is to inform and
educate policymakers about events and trends of strategic importance
to the US. Its board of directors once included former National
Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Today,
the Fund features Brookings Institution Senior Fellow Bruce Riedel,
who retired in 2006 after 30 years at the CIA. Riedel was a senior
advisor on South Asia and the Middle East to four Presidents in the
staff of the National Security Council at the White House, as well as
a negotiator at several Arab-Israeli peace summits including Camp
David and Wye River.
In
2007, the Jamestown Foundation reportedly held a seminar attended by
militants loyal to Aslan Maskhadov, the leader of a Chechen
separatist movement and president of the self-proclaimed ‘Republic
of Ichkeria.’ During the Second Chechen War in 1999, he led a
guerrilla resistance against the Russian army. He was killed in a
special operation by security services in 2005.
In
an interview with Voice of America, Jamestown denied that it had
trained Tsarnaev.
Georgia’s
Ministry of Internal Affairs said it had no knowledge of whether
Tsarnaev had attended the seminars. “We don’t have such
information, we haven’t heard anything of the kind, we don’t
know,” Nino Giorgobiani, head of the Georgian Ministry of
Internal Affairs’ press service told RIA Novosti.
Georgian
President Mikhail Saakashavili said the previous Georgian government
never recruited or trained groups of Chechens with the aim of
infiltrating them into the Russian Federation. He learned of
Ivanishvili’s comments on the issue while on a working visit to the
US. Saakashvili said he was sure “America will not take
Ivanishvili’s words seriously,” Izvestiya daily quoted him as
saying.
President
of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili (RIA Novosti/Mikhail Mokrushin)
It
was revealed that a misspelling of Tsarnaev’s name kept the FBI in
the dark about his early 2012 trip to Russia: “He went over to
Russia, but apparently, when he got on the Aeroflot plane, they
misspelled his name,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said
while speaking with Fox earlier this week. “So it never went
into the system that he actually went to Russia.”
Last
week, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the surviving younger brother implicated in
the deadly Boston Marathon bombings, was charged with using weapons
of mass destruction to kill people, a federal crime punishable by
death, the Justice Department said. The twin bombings near the finish
line of the Boston Marathon last Monday killed three people,
including an 8-year-old boy, and wounded up to 264 people.
Runners
continue to run towards the finish line of the Boston Marathon as an
explosion erupts near the finish line of the race in this photo
exclusively licensed to Reuters by photographer Dan Lampariello
after he took the photo in Boston, Massachusetts, April 15, 2013.
(Reutrers/Dan Lampariello)
Dzhokhar,
a naturalized US citizen of Chechen origin, further took
responsibility for his role in planting explosives near the marathon
finish line last week; he had previously maintained that his brother
Tamerlan was the mastermind of the terror plot.
Several
friends of Tamerlan’s 24-year-old widow, Katherine Russell, who he
persuaded to convert from Christianity to Islam, told National Public
Radio that Tsarnaev often bullied and verbally abused his wife,
calling her a “slut” and throwing pieces of furniture.
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