Chechnya activist’s murder sparks international outrage

MOSCOW,  (Reuters) – The abduction and murder of a  prominent human rights activist from Chechnya sparked  international outrage yesterday and her grieving supporters  asked “Who is next?”.

Friends carried Natalia Estemirova’s body from neighbouring  Ingushetia, where she was dumped in woodland after she was  abducted as she left home, and buried her in Chechnya.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged Russia to clarify the  circumstances surrounding her killing.
“I expressed my shock at the death,” Merkel said after  meeting Russian President Dimitry Medvedev in Germany.
Medvedev called it “a very sad event” and said he was  determined to find and punish Estemirova’s killers.
His remarks contrasted to those of Prime Minister Vladimir  Putin, who when president in 2006 was dismissive of slain  Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, saying she had “minimal  influence” on Russian society.

Politkovskaya was gunned down in her Moscow apartment  building in 2006. Nobody has been convicted of her murder.
The human rights organisation she worked for, Memorial, and  Helsinki Group, Russia’s oldest NGO, blamed Chechnya’s  Kremlin-backed president for Estemirova’s killing.

Amnesty International said it stemmed from a culture of  impunity both within Chechnya and in Russia as a whole. The  United States called it an “outrageous crime”.

A close friend of Politkovskaya, Estemirova, aged about 50,  and who leaves a 15-year-old daughter, worked for Memorial in  the Chechen capital Grozny and documented abuses by law  enforcement agencies.

Her abduction in Chechnya on Wednesday and killing was the  latest of a series of deaths of establishment critics which have  led to questions about Medvedev’s pledges to uphold the law.