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==External links==
==External links==

* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/chechnya/Story/0,2763,1084153,00.html Judge rejects bid to extradite Chechen rebel leader]; [[The Guardian]]; [[13 November]] [[2003]].
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/chechnya/Story/0,2763,1084153,00.html Judge rejects bid to extradite Chechen rebel leader]; [[The Guardian]]; [[13 November]] [[2003]].
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3249474.stm Chechen envoy granted UK asylum]; [[BBC]]; [[29 November]] [[2003]]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3249474.stm Chechen envoy granted UK asylum]; [[BBC]]; [[29 November]] [[2003]]
* [http://www.lenta.ru/terror/2004/05/07/zakaev/ NATO: Zakaev is terrorist]


{{Chechen wars}}
{{Chechen wars}}
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[[Category:Chechen field commanders]]
[[Category:Chechen field commanders]]
[[Category:Chechen presidential candidates]]
[[Category:Chechen presidential candidates]]
[[Category:Chechen terrorists]]
[[Category:Deputy prime ministers of Chechnya]]
[[Category:Deputy prime ministers of Chechnya]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Revision as of 00:31, 28 September 2007

Akhmed Khalidovich Zakayev (Chechen: Ахмед Халидович Закаев) (born April 26, 1956 in Kazakhstan) is the Foreign Minister of Chechen Republic government-in-exile, appointed by the President Aslan Maskhadov shortly after his 1997 election, and again in 2006 by Abdul Halim Sadulayev.

Political and military career

Akhmed Zakayev, a former actor at Grozny theatre, became a Minister of Culture in the government of Dzokhar Dudayev. After the start of the First Chechen War he left his job and eventually became an important field commander of a Chechen resistance group. His group operated in the South West of the country with its headquarters in the town of Urus-Martan. In August 1996, Zakayev's group took part in the Chechen recapture of Grozny, where he led the attack on the city's Central Railway Station.

His war merits in the mid-1990s paved Zakayev's way to Chechen high politics. As a moderate leader, he represented Chechnya at the peace talks in Khasav-Yurt, which in 1996 brought a peaceful end to the first armed conflict between Moscow and Grozny. After the talks, Zakayev became the Chechen Deputy Prime Minister and a special envoy of President Aslan Maskhadov. At the same time, however, he continued to be the commander of his armed militia group.

In 1999 Zakayev was involved in negotiations with Russian representatives before and during the resumed hostilities. In 2000, after having been wounded, he left for abroad and turned into the most prominent representative of President Maskhadov in Western Europe. He now resides in the United Kingdom.

Exile

Living in London, Zakayev organized the World Chechen Congress in Copenhagen, During the congress, he was accused by Russia of involvement in planning the Moscow theatre siege. Zakayev firmly denied involvement in the theater capture. The Russians demanded his arrest and extradition, alleging foreknowledge of the Moscow theatre siege and other crimes involving hundreds of killings and captures of Russian servicemen during the separatist wars in Chechnya. He was arrested in Denmark on October 30, 2002, and held for five weeks. The matter was never brought to court and he was released by the justice ministry who said that Russia's charges against him were not sufficiently grounded in fact. While there is officially a moratorium on the use of the death penalty in Russia (as is a must for any member of the Council of Europe), it is not abolished by law, and the Danish courts refused to extradite Zakayev, explaining that the European Convention on Human Rights prohibits them from repatriating persons when they face the death penalty. [citation needed]

On December 7 2002, Zakayev returned to London, where he claimed asylum. The British authorities arrested him and he was released on 50,000 GBP bail, which was paid by Vanessa Redgrave who had traveled with him from Denmark. On November 13, 2003, a British judge rejected the Russian request for his extradition, saying that it was politically motivated and that he would be at risk of torture. On November 29 2003, it was announced that he had been granted political asylum in the UK. He has visited Germany without being arrested, the Interpol warrant voided by Germany's accession to the ECHR and the risk of torture mentioned above.

During the 2004 Beslan school hostage crisis Zakayev offered to fly to Russia to negotiate with the hostage takers. The siege ended in the bloody confusion before this.[1]