Accessibility links

Breaking News

Watchdog

Lana Estemirova was 15 when her mother, rights activist Natalya Estemirova, was abducted in the Chechen capital before turning up dead hours later.
Lana Estemirova was 15 when her mother, rights activist Natalya Estemirova, was abducted in the Chechen capital before turning up dead hours later.

The daughter of Natalya Estemirova, the Russian rights activist who who was abducted and killed 10 years ago, said she blames President Vladimir Putin, the leader of Chechnya, “and the whole system that they have built” for her mother’s death.

In an interview with Current Time, Lana Estemirova, 25, also said she agreed with reporting by Russian investigative journalists who say her mother’s abduction on July 15, 2009, was linked to her efforts to examine a police department in Chechnya that had allegedly been abducting civilians.

Hours after disappearing from the Chechen capital, Grozny, where she was abducted shortly after leaving her apartment building in the morning, Natalya Estermirova’s bullet-riddled body was found in neighboring Ingushetia.

“The only thing I always told her was to be more careful,” Lana Estemirova said in the July 14 interview with Current Time, the Russian-language network led by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA. “I always begged her not to put herself in danger, so she would always say where she was going.”

Natalya Estemirova led the Grozny office of the Russian rights group Memorial and was renowned for her writing and activism on human rights abuses in Chechnya and nearby regions of the North Caucasus.

She was one of a growing number of rights activists, reporters, or prominent political figures who died or disappeared under suspicious circumstances. In nearly all of those cases, law enforcement agencies have failed to identify or arrest any organizers, instead detaining lower-level suspects such as the gunmen or getaway drivers.

Russian human rights activist Natalya Estemirova in the Chechen capital in September 2004.
Russian human rights activist Natalya Estemirova in the Chechen capital in September 2004.


Russian and international rights groups echoed that complaint on the anniversary of Natalya’s killing, accusing Russian authorities of failing to bring anyone to justice.

Her daughter Lana, who now lives in Britain, told Current Time that she blamed Putin, as well as Ramzan Kadyrov, who has headed Chechnya for more than a decade and has been repeatedly accused of overseeing or condoning gross rights abuses in the southern Russian region.

“I’ll just say that everything is to blame for this: Putin, Kadyrov, and the whole system that they have built over the past 20 years are to blame,” she said.

It’s “a system in which you cannot speak the truth without consequences, a system in which you cannot criticize the actions or inaction of the authorities,” she said. “The whole system is to blame, which my mother fought against, which hundreds of human rights defenders and journalists, and lawyers continue to struggle against.”

At the time of her death, Natalya was investigating the disappearances and abductions of Chechen civilians, allegedly committed by a police precinct in the region. Reporters from the newspaper Novaya Gazeta and activists from Memorial have linked her killing directly to her work.

“I absolutely trust my mother's colleagues, 100-percent,” she said when asked if she shared those conclusions. “I am sure that if they stick to this version, then this is most likely close to the truth.”

Estemirova said she began to worry for her mother’s life in more seriousness after the January 2009 killing of Stanislav Markelov, a Russian defense lawyer who was gunned down in Moscow as he left a news conference, and Novaya Gazeta reporter Anastasia Baburova.

Markelov represented the family of an 18-year-old Chechen woman allegedly killed by a Russian colonel in one of the most notorious examples of war crimes to occur during the second Chechen war. Baburova was a young journalist who had been interviewing Markelov.

After Markelov’s death, “I doubly began to fear for my mother. But I never told her to stop doing it,” she said.

Written by Mike Eckel based on an interview conducted by Aleksei Aleksandrov
Pavel Shmakov (right), an ethnic Russian and principal of a school in Kazan, has been fined in the past for resisting Moscow's move to scrap mandatory education in local languages.
Pavel Shmakov (right), an ethnic Russian and principal of a school in Kazan, has been fined in the past for resisting Moscow's move to scrap mandatory education in local languages.

KAZAN, Russia -- The director of a private school in Russia's Tatarstan region has filed a lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) against a partial ban imposed by Russia's federal authorities on Tatar-language teaching in schools there.

Tatar lawmakers in November 2017 were instructed by the Russian Education Ministry to adopt new measures according to which daily, mandatory Tatar-language classes were replaced by non-mandatory classes limited to two hours per week.

The move caused an outcry in Tatarstan and other regions where local languages have official status alongside Russian.

Pavel Shmakov told RFE/RL on July 15 that Russian authorities have violated ethnic Tatars' right to receive education, their right to a fair trial, and their right to remedies and reparations when their human rights such as those guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights are violated.

Shmakov, who is an ethnic Russian, has opposed Moscow's move to scrap mandatory education in the local language in regions with indigenous ethnic groups.

In March 2018, he was fined the equivalent of $440 for refusing to drop mandatory Tatar-language classes at his school.

Shmakov told RFE/RL that his goal is to bring back mandatory education in the official languages to Russia's ethnic regions.

"Tatarstan is not the main or the only region facing the problem, other smaller languages [in Russia] may disappear," Shmakov said.

Load more

About This Blog

"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

Subscribe

Latest Posts

Journalists In Trouble

RFE/RL journalists take risks, face threats, and make sacrifices every day in an effort to gather the news. Our "Journalists In Trouble" page recognizes their courage and conviction, and documents the high price that many have paid simply for doing their jobs. More

XS
SM
MD
LG