In 1992, Popkov founded and then led the
interdenominational and inter-ethnic human rights group Omega, set up to promote dialogue between different ethnicities and
religious denominations in the
First Nagorno-Karabakh War. He also joined the
Memorial Human Rights Center, a leading Russian human rights group, and worked as a
freelance journalist for the oppositionist newspaper
Novaya Gazeta. Popkov later led a peace march in
Abkhazia, delivered food to the starving town of
Tkvarcheli besieged by the Georgian forces, and helped save many people from
summary execution after the
fall of Sokhumi. Popkov began working in
Chechnya in 1995 during the
First Chechen War, where he helped negotiate the release of dozens of civilian
hostages and
prisoners of war (including a
Russian Army general), and was a frequent visitor to
Grozny during the heavy fighting, where he helped release some of the Russian prisoners of war held in the
Presidential Palace in Grozny just before the Russian bombing in 1995. In 1999 he conducted a 40-day
hunger strike in protest at the renewed war in Chechnya. During the
Second Chechen War, Popkov often was arbitrarily detained by the security forces and his humanitarian activities were severely hindered by the Russian military. He was also frequently detained and threatened by some of the Chechen field commanders. ==Death==