• May 2000 - Moderate Chechen separatist politician
Ruslan Alikhadzhyev abducted and killed by the Russian forces in
Shali. • May 31, 2000 -
Sergei Zveryev,
Russia's second highest
official in
Chechnya, was killed by a remote controlled bomb in Grozny. The city
Mayor Supyan Makhchayev, who was with Zveryev, was injured in the bombing, and his assistant was also killed. • May 4, 2001 - A prominent Chechnya's religious leader,
Mullah Nasruddin Matuyev, was shot dead by two unidentified gunmen when he was returning home from the
mosque in the village of
Novye Atagi. • April 18, 2001 - Car of the Russian
human rights activist
Victor Popkov was attacked in Chechnya by unknown assailants. On June 2 he died of his wounds in a hospital in
Krasnogorsk near
Moscow. • June 6, 2001 - Local administration head of the village Gekhi-Chu Lema Idrisov was killed in the Urus-Martan district; 17 administration officials and six heads of village administrations have been killed in Chechnya in the eight months since January 2001. On June 10 Lukman Madalov, head of the administration of village
Valerik in the
Achkhoy-Martan district, was shot dead in his house. • September 10, 2001 -
Lecha Kadyrov, a nephew the head of Chechnya's pro-Moscow administration
Akhmad Kadyrov, and three of his companions were shot dead near
Kurchaloy, east Chechnya, after attackers fired at their car. • October 17, 2001 - A
surface-to-air missile shot down a
VIP Mi-8 helicopter over the
Chechen capital Grozny, killing all aboard. The helicopter was carrying
Major-General Anatoli Pozdnyakov, member of the
General Staff of the
Russian Armed Forces, Major-General
Pavel Varfolomeyev, deputy director of staff of the
Defence Ministry of Russia, eight
colonels, and three crewmembers. According to
Anna Politkovskaya, who interviewed General Pozdnyakov an hour before his death, the attack was actually work of the
corrupt elements in the
Russian military in Chechnya. • November 29, 2001 - A young Chechen woman,
Elza Gazuyeva, carried out an assassination attempt on the Urus-Martan military district
commandant, identified only as General Geydar Gadzhiev, blowing herself up with a
hand grenade near a group of Russian soldiers. Gazuyeva had lost a husband, two brothers, and a cousin in the war. Gadzhiev, who was accused of atrocities against
civilians by locals, reportedly had personally summoned Elza to witness her husband's and brother's
torture and
execution. He and several other soldiers later died of their wounds. • January 27, 2002 - A
Russian Interior Ministry Mi-8 was shot down in Nadterechny District, killing eleven people including crew. Among those killed in the crash were Russian deputy
interior minister Lieutenant-General Mikhail Rudchenko, responsible for security in the
Southern Federal District, and deputy commander of the
Internal Troops Major-General
Nikolai Goridov, as well as several other high-ranking officers including colonels Oriyenko, Stepanenko, and Trafimov. The chopper's downing coincided with the five-year anniversary of the election of separatist leader
Aslan Maskhadov as
President of Chechnya. • March 19, 2002 - One of the leaders of the radical wing of the Chechen
resistance and the influential
Jordanian
volunteer,
Amir Khattab, was killed by a
poisoned letter in an operation by the
Federal Security Service (FSB). The messenger, a Dagestani double agent known as Ibragim, was reportedly tracked down and killed a month later in
Azerbaijan on
Shamil Basayev's orders. • September 10, 2002 - Administrative head of the
Nadterechny District,
Akhmad Zavgayev (brother of
Doku Zavgayev), was killed as unknown gunmen opened fire his car in his home village of
Beno-Yurt, several kilometers away from Chechnya's border with
North Ossetia. • November 16, 2002 -
Lieutenant-General Igor Shifrin, head of the
Glavspetzstroi (Main Directorate of Special Construction of the Ministry of Defense), was killed in
ambush in Grozny when his and another vehicle came under intense fire from
automatic weapons. During the manhunt for the killers of the
general, two
policemen were killed and two more were wounded; an unspecified number of Chechen gunmen were reported killed in the firefight. • March 5, 2003 - The Chechen
OMON special-purpose police commander,
Dzhabrail Yamadayev, was killed in his own house in the village of Dyshne-
Vedeno by a bomb planted under a couch that he slept on; the explosive device was so powerful that the house was almost completely destroyed. Dzhabrail Yamadayev was one of Chechnya's best-known and influential figures. During the First Chechen War the
Yamadayev brothers fought against the
federal troops and enjoyed great influence as field commanders, but changed sides in 1999. • May 9, 2004 - Pro-Russian president
Akhmad Kadyrov was assassinated in a blast of the substantial bomb inside of a Grozny's Uvays Akhtayev Stadium during the celebration of Russian
Victory Day. A number of other top government and military officials were killed or injured in the attack including: The chairman of the State Council of Chechnya,
Hussein Isayev, the military commander in the
North Caucasus,
Colonel-General Valery Baranov, the Chechen
interior minister,
Alu Alkhanov and the military commandant of Chechnya, Major-General
Grigory Fomenko. In all, 13 persons in the VIP stand were killed, and 53 were wounded. Kadyrov had survived at least three preceding bomb attacks: one on his Grozny
headquarters in 2002, one by a pair of
female suicide bombers at a religious festival in Iliskhan-Yurt on May 14, 2003, and another by a young
shahidka, Mariam Tashukhadzhiyeva, in Grozny few weeks later. His successor, acting President
Sergey Abramov, was targeted by yet another bombing in July 2004 which he survived. • February 7, 2007 -
Mairbek Murdagaliyev, deputy head of the
Vedensky District administration, killed in a blast of an explosive device planted at the door of his house. ==Assassinations in North Caucasus==