Become an OC Media MemberSupport independent journalism in the Caucasus:
Join Today
Media logo
Chechnya

Chechen court gives life imprisonment to man already sentenced to 200 years

Chechen court gives life imprisonment to man already sentenced to 200 years

On 20 February, Chechnya’s Shatoy District Court sentenced Maksim Ponarin to life imprisonment in a penal colony. The man was accused of taking part in an attack on Russian troops in 2000, during the Second Chechen War.

Stavropol-native Ponarin, who converted to Islam and in 2000 and fought alongside Chechen militants Shamil Basayev and Ibn al-Khattab, was found guilty of an ‘attempt on the life of military serviceman’. According to the press-service of the FSB in Stavropol Kray, he was sentenced to 13 years in prison. In conjunction with other offences, he was sentenced to life imprisonment in a penal colony.

Investigators claim that Ponarin was among the militants who took part in the attack on a detachment of Pskov paratroopers near the village of Ulus Kert in Chechnya in February 2000. More than 80 Russian soldiers were killed in the battle.

This is the 17th crime Ponarin has been convicted of. In 2007, the Moscow City Court sentenced him to 200 years in prison and one life sentence for his part in the 2004 bombing of the Rizhskaya Metro Station in Moscow. Two other Stavropol-natives, Tamby Khubiyev and Murat Shavayev, were sentenced to multiple life sentences and 250 years in prison under the same charges in 2007 and January 2017.

Related Articles

Ramzan Kadyrov. Screengrab from the official 9 October meeting footage.
Chechnya

Kadyrov threatens blood feud against three Russian lawmakers

S

The head of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, has publicly accused three Russian lawmakers — Daghestani Federation Council Senator Suleiman Kerimov, as well as State Duma MPs Bekkhan Barakhoev and Rizvan Kurbanov — of plotting to assassinate him and threatened to declare a blood feud against them. At a meeting with Chechnya’s commanders and security forces leaders on 9 October, Kadyrov, speaking in Chechen, reportedly claimed to have information about a contract on his life. He warned that if the thre

Nikita Zhuravel. Image: TASS.
adam kadyrov

Quran burner beaten by Adam Kadyrov charged with treason

L

A man who set fire to a Quran and was subsequently beaten up by Adam Kadyrov while in detention in Chechnya has been charged with high treason for allegedly sharing information with Ukrainian security services. The Volgograd Prosecutor’s Office approved the charges against 20-year-old Nikita Zhuravel on Thursday. He faces up to life in prison if convicted.  Zhuravel gained public attention after footage purportedly of him burning a Quran appeared on social media. He was arrested and later

Mufti of Chechnya elected leader of North Caucasian Muslims
Chechnya

Mufti of Chechnya elected leader of North Caucasian Muslims

L

The Mufti of Chechnya and known advisor to Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, Salakh Mezhiev, has been elected chair of the Coordination Centre of Muslims of the North Caucasus.  On 28 September, the Council of Muftis unanimously elected Mezhiyev during a meeting in Cherkessk, the capital city of Karachay–Cherkessia.  ‘I congratulate the respected Sheikh Salakh-Khadzhi Mezhiev on his election to this post. I am confident that he will justify the high trust placed in him by religious leaders o

The author, and a Ukrainian-Chechen protest in Sheffield.
Chechnya

Opinion | Fighting on two fronts: Chechen activists in the West

A

Exiled from their republic due to threats to their lives, Chechen activists in the West navigate a difficult balance between visibility and caution, facing erasure by both Russian and Western society. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine might offer Chechnya and its activists a shift in the tides.  ‘Ukraine’s incredible incursion into the Kursk region made me finally believe that Russia could soon be defeated’. This is what Ali Bakaev, a Chechen online activist who now lives in London tells m

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks