Hindustani78
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Veteran Chechen fighters locked in fierce battle with Russian-backed militants in east Ukraine - watch on - uatoday.tv
Chechen fighters and Ukrainian troops join forces
Almost nineteen years after the war in Chechnya, reports of hundreds of veteran Chechen fighters have emerged who are now battling on both sides of the conflict in east Ukraine.
These men are part of a Ukrainian volunteer battalion defending the front line near the village of Shyrokyne, about 10 kilometers east of the Ukrainian-held port city of Mariupol.
The men form a Chechen battalion named after Shah Mansur, a ruler of ancient Iran. They don't wear any bullet proof gear. The fighters say that according to Muslim beliefs every man's fate is already written in the heavens.
Muslim, Unit commander: "Here is the answer to the body armor question, when your time comes, you can't run away from it."
Ukrainian volunteer battalion fighters and Russian-backed insurgents have been locked in fierce battle over an area near a school in Shyrokyne. Our correspondent Andriy Tsaplienko embedded with the Chechen fighters said: "Everything that they own and what they drive was purchased with their own money. Their weapons were given to them by their countrymen. They crossed many different borders to get there. The most difficult border to cross was into Ukraine. But they've been breaking stereotypes as well as borders to fight for Ukraine, because they see our war as a continuation of theirs."
Chechen rebels fought and lost two wars for independence against Russia. As a result, some Chechen fighters switched sides and joined the ranks of pro-Kremlin president of Chechnya Ramzan Kadyrov. The 37-year-old strongman has been credited by Russian President Vladimir Putin for bringing stability to the volatile region but critics say he has accomplished this through massive human rights violations.
Now some of the remaining veteran Chechen fighters who still believe in their nations's independence and don't agree with Kadyrov's policies say they're continuing their struggle alongside Ukrainians against a common foe.
Muslim, Unit commander: "We need to break their necks here and not anywhere else, not in Belarus or Kazakhstan or Georgia. And that is why we are here."
They are driven by a strong belief that if Russian fighters are defeated in Ukraine, Chechnya will escape from the Kremlin's sphere of influence as well.
Muslim, Unit commander: "If we beat them here, Chechnya becomes independent, and not only Chechnya, but also the entire Caucasus region. This is why we are here."
Some of the other fighters are young men who say they haven't seen much of the world except war.
Mansur, Chechen fighter: "Our people have known over the centuries what the term ‘Russian occupier' really is. So for us it's easier to understand these things."
Ukrainian volunteer battalions have been locked in fierce fighting against Russian-backed insurgents near Mariupol for weeks, but it seems that ammunition and arms are hard to come by. Most of the men are now using World War Two-era weapons.
Hmuruy, Ukrainian volunteer battalion fighter: "This is a SVT-40, a Tokareva sniper rifle made in 1941." This is why the Chechen fighters are teaching Ukrainian fighters how to make weapons.
The Chechen fighters' commander also says that many more fighters from the Caucuses region want to come to Ukraine to fight for what they say is their 'common freedom'. He says Moscow is using the same methods in Ukraine as it did more than a decade ago in Chechnya.
Muslim, Unit commander: "Soldiers are like slaves, they cry and they are hungry but they outnumbered us. And behind them are their security services, and step by step they went into our country. They're doing the same thing here."
It's still unclear how many of Chechens loyal to pro-Kremlin leader Karydorv are fighting alongside the Russian-backed insurgents and how many are fighting against them. But it seems that for both sides backing down is not an option.
Kadyrov once rejected reports that Chechens back down saying that ‘if a Chechen takes up arms he doesn't surrender'.
Veteran Chechen fighters locked in fierce battle with Russian-backed militants in east Ukraine - watch on - uatoday.tv
Chechen fighters and Ukrainian troops join forces
Almost nineteen years after the war in Chechnya, reports of hundreds of veteran Chechen fighters have emerged who are now battling on both sides of the conflict in east Ukraine.
These men are part of a Ukrainian volunteer battalion defending the front line near the village of Shyrokyne, about 10 kilometers east of the Ukrainian-held port city of Mariupol.
The men form a Chechen battalion named after Shah Mansur, a ruler of ancient Iran. They don't wear any bullet proof gear. The fighters say that according to Muslim beliefs every man's fate is already written in the heavens.
Muslim, Unit commander: "Here is the answer to the body armor question, when your time comes, you can't run away from it."
Ukrainian volunteer battalion fighters and Russian-backed insurgents have been locked in fierce battle over an area near a school in Shyrokyne. Our correspondent Andriy Tsaplienko embedded with the Chechen fighters said: "Everything that they own and what they drive was purchased with their own money. Their weapons were given to them by their countrymen. They crossed many different borders to get there. The most difficult border to cross was into Ukraine. But they've been breaking stereotypes as well as borders to fight for Ukraine, because they see our war as a continuation of theirs."
Chechen rebels fought and lost two wars for independence against Russia. As a result, some Chechen fighters switched sides and joined the ranks of pro-Kremlin president of Chechnya Ramzan Kadyrov. The 37-year-old strongman has been credited by Russian President Vladimir Putin for bringing stability to the volatile region but critics say he has accomplished this through massive human rights violations.
Now some of the remaining veteran Chechen fighters who still believe in their nations's independence and don't agree with Kadyrov's policies say they're continuing their struggle alongside Ukrainians against a common foe.
Muslim, Unit commander: "We need to break their necks here and not anywhere else, not in Belarus or Kazakhstan or Georgia. And that is why we are here."
They are driven by a strong belief that if Russian fighters are defeated in Ukraine, Chechnya will escape from the Kremlin's sphere of influence as well.
Muslim, Unit commander: "If we beat them here, Chechnya becomes independent, and not only Chechnya, but also the entire Caucasus region. This is why we are here."
Some of the other fighters are young men who say they haven't seen much of the world except war.
Mansur, Chechen fighter: "Our people have known over the centuries what the term ‘Russian occupier' really is. So for us it's easier to understand these things."
Ukrainian volunteer battalions have been locked in fierce fighting against Russian-backed insurgents near Mariupol for weeks, but it seems that ammunition and arms are hard to come by. Most of the men are now using World War Two-era weapons.
Hmuruy, Ukrainian volunteer battalion fighter: "This is a SVT-40, a Tokareva sniper rifle made in 1941." This is why the Chechen fighters are teaching Ukrainian fighters how to make weapons.
The Chechen fighters' commander also says that many more fighters from the Caucuses region want to come to Ukraine to fight for what they say is their 'common freedom'. He says Moscow is using the same methods in Ukraine as it did more than a decade ago in Chechnya.
Muslim, Unit commander: "Soldiers are like slaves, they cry and they are hungry but they outnumbered us. And behind them are their security services, and step by step they went into our country. They're doing the same thing here."
It's still unclear how many of Chechens loyal to pro-Kremlin leader Karydorv are fighting alongside the Russian-backed insurgents and how many are fighting against them. But it seems that for both sides backing down is not an option.
Kadyrov once rejected reports that Chechens back down saying that ‘if a Chechen takes up arms he doesn't surrender'.