Movladi Udugov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movladi Udugov
Мовлади Саидарбиевич Удугов
First Deputy Prime Minister of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria
In office
August 1996 – 2 February 1997
Personal details
Born (1962-02-09) 9 February 1962 (age 62)
Germenchuk, Checheno-Ingush ASSR, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
NationalityChechen
Political partyNCCP, IU, CPID (currently none)
Alma materGrozny State University

Movladi Saidarbievich Udugov (Chechen: Мовла́ди Саидарби́евич Уду́гов, born 9 February 1962 in Germenchuk, Shalinsky District, Chechnya into the Shirdi teip) is the former First Deputy Prime Minister of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria (ChRI). As a Chechen propaganda chief, he was credited for the Chechens' victory on the information front during the First Chechen War.

A highly-controversial figure, following a particularly fundamentalist strain of Islam that is not shared by most Chechens, he is currently one of the ideologues and the main propagandist behind the Caucasus Emirate (a Pan-Islamic militant movement that is rejecting the idea of a merely independent Chechen state in favor of an Islamic state encompassing most of the Russia's North Caucasus and based on Islamic Sharia law).[1]

Georgi Derluguian has described him as a "wonderfully opportunistic journalist" and an "autodidactic master of Chechen war propaganda" who, outside Islamic sources, also quotes Western authors such as Gramsci and Huntington.[2]

Udugov currently lives in exile in Turkey.[3]

Biography[edit]

Early life[edit]

From 1983 to 1988, Udugov studied in Checheno-Ingushetia State University. Since 1988, was editor in chief of the newspaper Orientir, which was banned by the regional committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1989. Soon, he became a member of the Presidium of the Executive Committee of the National Congress of Chechen People (NCCP). In NCCP, Movladi Udugov became the chairman of the Information Committee and simultaneously an employee of the local television station; during the 1991 revolution in Grozny, Udugov used this position to broadcast Dzhokhar Dudayev's address to the people.

Political career[edit]

After the Chechen declaration of independence by Dudayev, Udugov joined the ruling structures of the Chechen separatist government, serving as press secretary. During the 1994-1996 war, the ways in which he distributed information about the conflict, although crude by the Western standards, were still more professional than those of the Kremlin and the Russian federal forces. In August 1996, Movladi Udugov was appointed the First Deputy Prime Minister of Chechen Republic for state policy and information in the war-time cabinet of Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev who became an acting president after the death of Dudayev. For his role in the Chechen victory in information warfare (and the whole war) Udugov was awarded the Ichkeria's highest medal, Honor of the Nation. Among his Russian enemies, he became known as "the Chechen Goebbels".

Following the end of the First Chechen War, Udugov unsuccessfully ran for the post of President of Ichkeria in the January 1997 election, but received less than 1% of the votes (in his election campaign he was representing an unpopular radical Islamist platform). Udugov again became a Deputy Prime Minister and of the Minister of Information in the government of Aslan Maskhadov. In 1996-1997 he travelled to Moscow on a number of occasions for talks with members of the Security Council of Russia and Russian government, including as a part of Chechen delegation for the signing of peace treaty at the Kremlin.[4] In August 1997, Udugov founded Islamic Umma party, uniting a number of political movements in Chechnya and neighbouring Dagestan. In 1998, together with Shamil Basayev and several other radical Chechen and Dagestani figures, Udugov organized the association called Congress of the Peoples of Ichkeria and Dagestan. In March 1999, Udugov helped to create Kavkaz Center, a Chechen international Islamic Internet agency; he also sponsors several other websites, among them Russian language The Chechen Times. According to an Anti-Defamation League investigator, Udugov propagated antisemitic ideas in his media.[5]

Since 1999[edit]

Russian authorities accused him of being one of the main organizers of the Chechen rebel-led attack on Dagestan in August 1999, and Udugov is wanted by the Russian federal government since 20 March 2000, accused of having violated Article 279 of Russia's criminal code, which outlaws "armed uprisings."[4] At the start of the Second Chechen War in September 1999, Udugov left Chechnya to abroad, resulting in a rapid decline of his influence on the Chechen separatist movement at the time. There were reports about his stay in Afghanistan, Scandinavia, Turkey, Persian Gulf countries and possibly United States; although no evidence has been offered to support any of these claims. His current whereabouts are unknown. Since February 2006, following his victory in a dispute with exiled moderate Chechen leader Akhmed Zakayev, he once again became an official rebel spokesman, heading National Information Service (NIS) of the State Defense Council.[6] In October 2007, Udugov was said to be the author of the proclamation of the Caucasus Emirate;[7] during the following constitutional crisis, the ChRI government in exile led by Zakayev dismissed Udugov from the post of the head of NIS and abolished the service.[8] Since 2007, Udugov runs the Informational-Analytical Service of the Caucasus Emirate.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Elisabeth Smick. Russia's Chechen Resistance, Council on Foreign Relations, July 18, 2006 Archived July 22, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Derluguian, Georgi (1999). "Che Guevaras in turbans". New Left Review. 237: 7.
  3. ^ Fuller, Liz (8 July 2016). "Chechen Leader Demands Turkey Hand Over 'Terrorists'". RFERL.
  4. ^ a b Turkey says it will help catch Movladi Udugov, The Jamestown Foundation, January 11, 2002 Archived July 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ (in Russian) Политический антисемитизм в современной России (Глава 2. Российские мусульмане и антисемитизм), SOVA Center, August 6, 2003
  6. ^ Chechen underground government reshuffle, Prague Watchdog, February 08, 2006
  7. ^ Who is to gain from the provocation under the name of ‘The Caucasus Emirate’ Archived 2009-01-07 at the Wayback Machine, Chechenpress, October 31, 2007
  8. ^ Постановление Парламента ЧРИ № 2-B, Chechenpress, 10.11.2007

External links[edit]