Beslan, ten years after
First there was the blast, and then as sight as surreal as it was ghastly. Dozens of children, naked bar their underwear, running barefoot into the village, peppered with blood, screaming.
After three days
agonizing, the siege to end the standoff at Middle School Number One, in
Beslan, southern Russia, began with a huge explosion in the gym where
dozens of militants had herded 1,200 children and parents. The
explosives inside had been rigged up between two basketball hoops and
the hostages lined the walls of the gym. One witness said the blast
caused it to "rain meat" inside the gym.
Those who could, ran.
They fled between houses, stripped of their clothes because of the
scorching heat they had endured in the glass-windowed gym, where many
were forced to drink urine to hydrate, towards a village that had been
holding its breath for over 50 hours.
The hostage crisis in Beslan,
and the bungled, reckless operation that the Russian military allowed
to happen, was a defining moment in Putin's war in southern Russia.
Moscow's use of blunt
instruments to fix its increasingly Islamist rebellion in the restless
North Caucasus, had blatantly not worked, despite two wars to end
Chechen separatism, and had instead created a new radicalized,
implacable monster, capable of blowing children to pieces, perhaps under
the justification they were, in Beslan's region of North Ossetia,
Christians.
Unrecognizable horror
There was remarkable
bravery shown by Russian special forces during the rescue operation,
just none from their political masters.
The siege began, but no
cordon was put in place, so the media and villagers could simply walk
into the school's yard, and even the school itself, unimpeded. I watched
the Vimpel detachment of Russian spetznaz race past me, headlong into
the school, unsupported and outgunned.
They must have known they
were running to their deaths, but sprinted all the same. I watched one
of them brace himself against a door frame, before turning a corner to
fire.
Body after body was
brought out, most shipped away by locals in cars rushed in for the
purpose -- there was no triage system, just brave emergency services
workers, who also died rescuing children.
One militant was dragged
from the building, his trousers pulled from his waist. Once the locals
checked he was circumcised (and therefore, by their logic, Muslim, and
hence a gunman), they beat him to a pulp and left his body in the back
of a truck.
I ran into the gym while the siege was still ongoing, and its floor was a black mush of unrecognizable horror.
The fighting went on,
into the night, as one militant held out. Putin, who had, when he came
to power, pledged to shoot Chechen militants in the toilet, and who had
the steel will to order a partially lethal
knockout gas and swift
military operation to end the siege of a Moscow theater two years
earlier, was absent from Beslan.
He slipped in the night
of the violence, visiting the wounded. Nobody wanted to be associated
with Beslan's mess. They still don't.
Monument to the dead
It is nearly a decade
ago, but still the scenes retain a revolting clarity in my mind. Amid
the shrill noise of militant threats ahead of the Sochi Olympic Winter
Games, the gym in Beslan is now steeped in silence, a monument to the
dead, untouched almost.
Women under house arrest for Sochi
The body parts that still lay there the day after the bloodshed are gone.
The victims' clothes
that someone had hung from changing room pegs when I returned three
months later -- they too are gone. There are some structural supports to
keep the building up, but otherwise it is as if Beslan the village has
shielded the school from the passage of time, perhaps because Beslan
itself is still caught in the painful task of seeking answers.
It is not only the
amorphous puzzle to find a "why" -- the only surviving gunman's father
told me passively that Lenin said, during the Russian civil war, there
is "white and there is red, and there always will be", but offered
little other motivation.
It is also their still
unresolved bid to find out how negotiations failed and how such a
bungled, bloody operation could ever have come to be.
Borik Rubayev was
orphaned by the blast. Three weeks later, he pointed at the school and
matter-of-factly told me his mother and father had died in the school.
Three months later, he was at the center of a custody battle between his
relatives, some suggesting the large compensation payout he was getting
from the state, was fueling the competition.
Today, he is 16 and
towers in the gym, where he was once physically sheltered by his mother
as the bomb went off. He says his memory is patchy, and that the dreams
that used to haunt him have ebbed.
"I don't really remember
much", he said. "Mother and aunt covered me up. Everybody started to
run, but the terrorists tried to stop us. We thought it was the end."
He remembers how someone
sitting next to him made a run for it, and he followed, and hid
somewhere.
Then, in the carnage they had begun, an uncharacteristic sign
of humanity came from one of the gunmen, he recalls.
"One of the terrorists, I
think it was, gave me food and water, then the emergency services came
and took me to hospital in a car."
Today, he enjoys
basketball, and hopes to avoid conscription in the army. He lives with
his aunt, after public pressure resolved the custody dispute.
The school he studies
in, with another 124 former hostages, is lined with memorials of the
spetznaz and medics who gave their lives saving others.
Teachers say they these
pupils have few problems -- bar instances of "dovleniye", a Russian word
directly translated as "pressure," but used inaccurately to suggest
depression or anxiety.
In fact, the building
marries a cheerfulness sustained relentlessly by the teachers, with the
constant remembering of the dead, as if aimed at making the survivors
sit happily with their past.
Little peace
The mothers of Beslan,
however, know little peace. Anger at the government bloomed after the
siege. They felt abandoned in the immediate aftermath, before Moscow
poured millions into the town, and its now garish graveyard, as if to
compensate for their absence when it was most needed.
Those feelings of anger
turned into suspicion: Endless investigations have not satisfied some
who believe perhaps the government knew of the gunmen's plan and didn't
act, or even ordered the first shots fired to prevent them having to
negotiate with the militants.
Margarita Tuaeva, whose
children survived, retains those suspicions even a decade on. "They
started it because they could not get out of this situation in any other
way. They didn't want to negotiate. Without Putin's order, that
couldn't have happened."
For others, the lack of answers simply amplifies inexhaustible grief.
Tamara Shotaeva lost her
two daughters and lights two candles for them in the driving snow. She
cries as she talks of how she has no idea what her daughter would have
looked like if she lived til today.
She says: Time doesn't heal at all."
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