MOSCOW: A Russian court charged on Sunday two men with the murder of opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, including a former police officer from Chechnya who confessed to his involvement in what investigators said was a contract killing.
Four others denied any connection to the killing of Mr Nemtsov who was shot four times in the back on February 27 while walking with his girlfriend along a bridge outside the Kremlin in a brazen assassination that sent shivers through the country’s opposition.
Interfax news agency quoted a law-enforcement source as saying that a sixth suspect threw a grenade at police who came to arrest him in the Chechen capital and killed himself with another grenade on Saturday.
In Moscow, masked, heavily armed police marched the five handcuffed suspects through hallways packed with journalists and into two separate courtrooms where they were placed inside defendants’ cages and ordered to be held for around two months pending the investigation.
According to documents read out in court, the accused were charged under a section of the Russian criminal code which showed the investigators believed that the murder was carried out by a group of people for financial gain, the Interfax news agency reported.
The charges also involved extortion and banditry. Investigators said they were still seeking others who might have been involved.
Also read: Russian opposition leader Nemtsov shot dead near Kremlin
However, as in a string of other killings of Russian opposition figures, officials have yet to shed light on who might have ordered the late-night murder of the 55-year-old Nemtsov, a fierce critic of President Vladimir Putin.
Zaur Dadayev, a decorated former deputy commander in a Chechen police unit born in 1982, and Anzor Gubashev, 31, who worked for a private security company in Moscow, were arrested on Saturday in the province of Ingushetia which neighbours Chechnya.
They were both charged with murder but Gubashev denied involvement.
“The participation of Dadayev is confirmed by his confession,” said presiding judge Nataliya Mushnikova, according to state news agencies.
Court spokeswoman Anna Fadeyeva told the RIA Novosti news agency that the other three men were only considered suspects at this stage.
They are Gubashev’s younger brother Shagid, Ramzat Bakhayev, 45, and Tamerlan Eskerkhanov, 34. The men are all from the volatile northern Caucasus region where Russia has fought two devastating wars against Chechen militants and where security forces continue to clash with insurgents.
“The suspects denied their involvement in this crime but investigators have proof of their involvement,” a representative for the investigation told the court.
However no information emerged as to the possible motive the men could have had in killing the former prime minister who was one of the last outspoken opponents to Mr Putin.
Mr Nemtsov’s supporters believe his assassination was a hit ordered by the top levels of government determined to silence dissenters. The allegation has been strenuously denied.
The murder in one of the most heavily policed parts of the Russian capital sent shockwaves through an opposition which has seen several critics of the Kremlin killed in recent years and which accuses Mr Putin of steadily suppressing independent media and opposition parties.
Mr Nemtsov’s daughter Zhanna Nemtsova, in an interview with CNN from Germany, said the murder was obviously “politically motivated”. “I think that now, Russia has crossed the line after this murder, and people will be frightened to express their ideas which contradict... the official standpoint.”
Her comments echo those heard from Kremlin critics such as activist Alexei Navalny, who accused “the country’s political leadership” of ordering a hit on Mr Nemtsov.
Mr Nemtsov, who had long complained of being followed and having his phone tapped, had spoken of his fear of being killed.
Mr Putin has described Mr Nemtsov’s killing as a tragedy that “brought disgrace on Russia” and vowed that everything would be done to bring to justice those who committed a “vile and cynical murder”.
Many Russians say that failing direct involvement, Mr Putin is still to blame for whipping up hatred against the opposition by regularly referring to them as a “fifth column” of traitors and spies — a message spread daily by all-powerful state media.
He first used the term — which originated during the Spanish civil war and refers to a group of people undermining a nation from within — after he ordered the annexation of Crimea in Ukraine last year, plunging relations with the West to lows not seen since the Cold War.
Published in Dawn, March 9th, 2015
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