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Mobin
21-03-2001, 13:12
Islamic ruling from Chechen Supreme Court on Kadirov

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what jihaad? this is question to people like Italian sheikh who supports Israel and considers Russia fighting a "jihad". Your scholar is a kaafir oh shaykh baatil he is a murtadd halaal ad-dam wal-maal.check this out:


Moscow News (Sept. 14-20): CHECHNYA’S MUFTI: “THIS WAS NO JIHAD; IT WAS A DECEPTION”

Sanobar Shermatova
Last week, Hajj Ahmad Kadirov, the Mufti of Chechnya, had a talk with Russian Premier Vladimir Putin. The mufti happened to be in the Government House, along with other spiritual leaders from North Caucasian republics, but he was introduced to the Premier as the “head of the spiritual administration of independent Chechnya.” The fact that the interview took place at all is sensational:

Russian officials have long avoided negotiations with Chechen representatives, and Chechen representatives have avoided any kind of situation in which Chechnya could be treated as just another North Caucasian member republic. Why did the Mufti ignore this tacit tabu? The answers are in this interview.

KADIROV. I had come to Moscow for a meeting of the Coordinating Council of the Muslims of the North Caucasus, and as a member of the Council I attended a reception in Government House. The conversation [with Putin] was a comprehensive one. I said to President Putin: “Let’s divide the blame for the war in Dagestan in half: half for you, the other half for the Chechen side. If we couldn’t cope with the job of throwing out those, so to speak, outsiders, you also saw what was happening.” The President couldn’t object. Neither the Chechen nor the Dagestani people want this war. But there are people who want it—on both sides. There are a lot of questions about this war, questions to which I personally can’t find any answers. I told Putin that if Russia had recognized our independence, this war would never have happened. Putin didn’t agree with me, but that’s my opinion anyway.

MN: What is your attitude to the Jihad that Basayev and Khattab proclaimed in Dagestan?

KADIROV: It’s a deception. I spoke on Chechen television right after the events in Dagestan began. I reminded all those who had forgotten that our neighbor’s [Dagestan’s] mosques were open and functioning at a time when our republic did not have a single mosque. Chechens went to their neighbors to find out on what day they should start celebrating religious holidays. And then, to go over there, and proclaim a “jihad”?! On television, I said:

“I swear, by the name of Allah, this is no jihad! Go and bring your deluded sons home from their units. Stop them.” Who had ears to hear, heard.

I reminded everyone: We announced that our republic would be based on Sharia. But it isn’t yet. What do we have to teach anyone else? Let’s put our own house in order, and then we can say: Look, brothers, see what a paradise we are living in! But nobody wants the kind of paradise we are actually living in. The whole world knows what is going on here. And now we are introducing “order” next door. Right. Thousands of refugees,whole villages destroyed...

But Russian leaders have to share the blame. Fine, let’s say, Russia does not interfere in Chechnya’s affairs, we are independent, we live the way we want to. But Dagestan is a part of the Russian Federation, and two Dagestani villages being bombed today two years ago introduced their own Islamic order, in no way compatible with the Constitution of Dagestan or Russian law.

MN: Do you consider the guerrillas who are fighting in Dagestan to be religious?

KADIROV. I find it hard to consider them Muslims. They reject everything new that has been created after the Prophet, calling it all bid’ah [innovation]. Well, for us, THEY are bid’ah: we never had them before! It’s useless to try to have a dialogue with them; they don’t listen to your arguments. They have concrete goals; a mission; a program. And that’s it.

MN: Are there any unarmed Wahhabis? Do you reject the idea that there may be people who share their views, but don’t plan to go to war with anybody?

No. All these people are armed. In order to attain their goals, they deceive people, bribe them. And who supplies THEM? All these
people went through Russian territory to get to Chechnya; and they travelled in groups. Where was the visa control looking? Customs? I asked Putin that. There are so many questions here. Who backs them, and what do they want? Jihad? If the Dagestanis had overthrown their leaders, as we did in Chechnya, and troops were brought in, and everybody rose to fight, that would be one thing. But they are content to live with Russia, well, let them live with Russia, they’re not stupid. They lead a normal life, nobody forbids them to pray. You want a mosque? Fine, you’ve got one. You want a madrasah [Islamic school]? Fine, you’ve got one. And here we come, imposing an Islamic state on them. No, that’s politics, that’s all nonsense.

MN. Are you saying the guerrillas have no religious goals?

KADIROV. I don’t see any. In the modern world, nobody imposes his religion on others. After the wars in the time of the Prophet, it was said that Islam had won all the space it required. And later it was said, “in faith there can be no compulsion.” And then,there is a political side to this question.

Islam says you should honor treaties and agreements. If the guerrillas had said, we are tearing up the Khasavyurt Agreements and we are declaring war on Russia, we could understand . But they didn’t do that.

MN. You are considered close to Maskhadov, yet your position differs from the official position of the Chechen authorities.

KADIROV. No, that’s not true. Chechnya’s official authorities fave the same views I do. Remember, official Chechen army units are not fighting in Dagestan. Those that are fighting there are not under Maskhadov’s control. But the authorities should have spoken out and condemned the attack before I did. They didn’t.

MN: Why not?

KADIROV. Good question.

MN: What must be done to stop this war?

KADIROV. Uproot this evil, which cloaks itself in Islam. Keep it from being spread in all the republics that want to live in peace. After all this it only gets better.....

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Monday 19 March 2001 Chechen Court Convicts Kadirov of Apostasy

The Chechen supreme court has passed a ruling convicting Ahmed Kadirov of riddah, (apostasy from the religion of Islam).

Kadirov, who previously was the most senior Mufti in Chechnya, as appointed by Vladimir Putin as the “Civilian Administrator” of Chechnya. Below is the statement issued by the supreme court:

Praise be to Allah. Prayers and Blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah.

When a Muslim intentionally performs an act that abrogates Islam while fully aware of that fact, neither under compulsion nor being forgetful, he (or she) becomes a murtad (an abandoner of Islam). First, he is asked to repent for his act of disbelief and is given time to consider his decision. If he refuses then the ruling according to Islam is that he is to be killed.

It is the ruling of the court that Ahmed Kadirov has performed a number of acts of major disbelief, including the following:

1. He entrusted the disbelievers and sided with them against the Muslims. Allah (SWT) says:

“O Believers; Take not the Jews and the Christians as Auliya (friends, protectors, helpers), they are but Auliya to one another. And if any amongst you takes them as Auliya, then surely he is one of them. Verily, Allah guides not those people who are unjust.” [The Quran 5:51]

2. He cursed Islamic acts and questioned the benefit of the Shariah (Islamic Legal System). Allah (SWT) says:

“...Say: “Was it at Allah (SWT), and His Ayat (verses, signs, revelations) and His Messenger (SAW) that you were mocking?” Make no excuse; you have disbelieved after you had believed...” [The Quran 9:65-66]

3. He is implementing the administrative rule from Moscow and therefore is using the laws of the disbelievers rather than the Shariah.

“...Therefore fear not men but fear Me and sell not My Verses for a miserable price. And whosoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed, such are disbelievers.” [The Quran 5:44]

4. He denied outright the Islamic obligation of Jihad.

The following are the results of the ruling:

1. Riddah is a crime that wipes all previously performed good needs and hell-fire is confirmed (unless the individual repents). His punishment is death according to the saying of our Prophet (SAW):

“Kill those of you who change their religion” (Bukhari & Muslim)

2. His marriage to a Muslim is made invalid since a Muslim woman is not allowed to marry a disbeliever.

3. He can no longer act as a guardian to any Muslim including his children. For example he cannot represent any of them in marriage. All contracts in which he represents them as a guardian are effectively null and void.

4. He cannot inherit from a Muslim relative and he is not to be inherited from when he dies. If he leaves behind any money, it should be spent for the general services for the Muslims. This is based on the saying of our Prophet (SAW):

“A disbeliever is not to inherit from a Muslim; Nor a Muslim inherit from a disbeliever” (Bukhari & Muslim)

5. When he dies or is killed, he is not to be washed, prayed ipon, nor buried in Muslim graveyards.

In conclusion, it is the finding of the court that irrefutable evidence has come to light showing that Ahmed Kadirov has abandoned the religion of Islam. The Mujahideen commanders are encouraged to arrest Kadirov and execute him according the dictates of the Shariah. The family of Kadirov should take note of the above points regarding marriage, guardianship, etc.

May Allah's Prayer and Peace be upon our Prophet, Muhammad, his Family, and all his Companions.

Issued by the Chechen Supreme Court.

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this is all is needed to say (or paste)

may Allah kill this murtadd and all those who believe like him! Allahumma ameen!

muutuu bi ghaythekum!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Mobin
21-03-2001, 16:29
Assalamu-alaikum:

The following article shows once more how "dirty" is the war in Chechnya and injustices that are carried out on our brothers and sisters. Pray for them and help them in whatever ways you can. One day we'll have to respond to Allah and we'll be surely questioned of where were we, and what we did to hwlp our Ummah.

Wa-salaam,
Mobin

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"Disappearances" Widespread in Chechnya
Mass Graves Also A Hallmark of Russia's "Dirty War"


(Stockholm, March 21, 2001) - European Union governments must press the issue of the "disappeared" in Chechnya when Russian President Vladimir Putin visits Stockholm this week, Human Rights Watch urged in releasing a new report on Chechnya today.

The 40-page report, "The 'Dirty War' in Chechnya: Forced Disappearances, Torture and Summary Executions," details the cases of fifty-two "disappeared" individuals who were last seen in the custody of Russian federal forces. Human Rights Watch believes the actual number of "disappeared" is much higher. The mutilated bodies of some of the "disappeared" were later found in unmarked graves in Chechnya, most bearing unmistakable signs of torture.

Human Rights Watch said that European governments should act decisively at the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, currently convening in Geneva, to ensure that an international commission of inquiry is formed to investigate human rights abuse in Chechnya.

The term "dirty war" was coined to describe the campaigns of forced "disappearances" perpetrated by Latin American governments in the 1970s and 80s.

"Russia's war in Chechnya is certainly a 'dirty war,'" said Holly Cartner, executive director of Human Rights Watch's Europe and Central Asia division. "The Russians have had plenty of time to investigate and prosecute these cases, but they haven't done so. It's time for the international community to act."

In a typical "disappearance," federal agents-from the Russian military, police, or security forces-take someone into custody during "sweep" operations or at a checkpoint. But Russian authorities later deny any knowledge of the individual who has "disappeared."

Family members may visit detention centers all over the northern Caucasus to glean information about their loved ones. Often they are compelled to bribe prison guards to scan prisoners' lists for the name of the "disappeared," or to pay middlemen who claim to have connections to authorities.

Russian legal authorities offer little help. The civilian procuracy charged with investigating such cases cannot compel the military authorities to cooperate. The thirty-four criminal investigations into "disappearances" that the civilian procuracy has opened so far have not resulted in the discovery of the whereabouts of any "disappeared," or in any indictments of perpetrators.

The Human Rights Watch report documents eight mass graves and eight other makeshift burials, where corpses of the "disappeared" and others have been found.

Among the victims whose cases are detailed in the report:

- Akhmed Zaurbekov and Khamzad Khasarov, who were detained on January 14, 2001. Local authorities denied all knowledge of their whereabouts. Two weeks later, their corpses were found in a rock quarry.

- Nina Lulueva and her two cousins, who were detained on June 3, 2000, were selling strawberries at a market in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, when they were detained by masked armed men. Her husband, a judge, searched for information on her whereabouts among all levels of law enforcement. Her corpse was found early this month in a mass grave near the Khankala military base.

- Two minors, Islam Dombaev and Murat Lyanov were detained, together with eighteen-year-old Timur Tabzhanov on June 28, 2000. Although police documents record their initial detention, their relations, after an exhaustive search, have been unable to obtain information about their whereabouts.

Human Rights Watch called on the U.N. Human Rights Commission in Geneva to give high priority to a draft international convention on protecting all persons form forced "disappearances."

The report is available on the Human Rights Watch website at:
http://www.hrw.org/hrw/reports/2001/chechnya/

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