Supyan Abdullayev
Supyan Abdullayev | |
---|---|
Native name | Супьян Абдуллаев |
Born |
Kazakh SSR, USSR | November 8, 1956
Died |
March 28, 2011 54) Ingushetia, Russia | (aged
Allegiance |
Caucasus Emirate Caucasian Front |
Battles/wars |
Supyan Abdullayev (Russian: Супьян Абдуллаев; 8 November 1956 – 28 March 2011)[1] was the vice president of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. He was appointed to this position (vacant since the death of Shamil Basayev) on 19 March 2007, by the President of Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, Dokka Umarov. He was considered the most senior figure after Umarov in the ranks of the Caucasian Emirate and a possible successor.[2]
Abdullayev was commander of the Jundullah Brigade, linked to the Vedeno-based wing of the Chechen resistance movement which was close to Basayev. He was primarily a religious figure rather than a military man, alike Abdul-Halim Sadulayev.
Biography
Abdullayev was born in the Kazakh SSR. He was a member of the Chechen teip of Tsadakharoy. In the late 1980s, together with the Chechen Islamist leader, Movladi Udugov, he was a founder member of the Islamic Renaissance Party, established in the Soviet Union.
After the First Chechen War, Supyan Abdullayev held the rank of Colonel and the deputy of Islam Khalimov, following Khalimov's appointment to the post of the interior minister in 1997. Both of the men left the ministry following the gun battle in Gudermes between the Salafis and the supporters of then-president Aslan Maskhadov on 15 July 1998. In the aftermath, Abdullayev grew distant from politics and became known as a "second stringer."
During the Second Chechen War, Abdullayev entered the ranks of the resistance in the very beginning, started out as a leader of a jamaat and eventually became the commander of a front and member of the Maskhadov government, reaching the rank of Brigadier General. Even though he was a jamaat member, he remained loyal to Aslan Maskhadov until the death of the latter. Supyan Abdullayev developed into one of the most senior ranking field commanders of the Caucasus Emirate, and the chief ideologue of the whole movement. He was named as Dokka Umarov's deputy emir.
Death
On 28 March 2011, Abdullayev was killed in a Russian airstrike on a rebel camp in Ingushetia. In this raid, the Emirate's overall leader was thought to have been killed, but it later surfaced, that he survived the airstrikes upon the rebel camp.[1]
References
- 1 2 "Emir Supyan: 17 years in Jihad". Islamic Media Network. 31 March 2011.
- ↑ What Direction For Chechnya?, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, July 8, 2008