A shooter. Iraq. Photo: REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic

19 February 2018, 18:21

Political analysts doubt close links of Kizlyar gunman with IS

The shooter at believers at the Kizlyar church was a "lone wolf", not directly linked with the "Islamic State" (IS), a terrorist organization banned in Russia, which has claimed responsibility for the attack, assert the experts interviewed by the "Caucasian Knot". Earlier, the IS reported the attack of its supporters on law enforcers only.

Khalil Khalilov, the Kizlyar killer, unlikely had any organizational and financial links with the IS, but shares the viewpoints of this organization, said Akhmet Yarlykapov, a senior researcher at the Centre for Ethno-Political Studies of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS).

In his opinion, "it is difficult to confirm the existence of IS units in Dagestan, because those who supported the organization, left several years ago."

Mr Yarlykapov has noted that for the first time the attacker claimed revenge for Muslims' sufferings in Syria.

According to Andrei Serenko, a political analyst, terrorists have treated the Kizlyar attack as a sort of rehabilitation for the failed terror acts in Russia.

The IS could try to play the national and inter-confessional card, when Dagestan "is living through a very special period of its history," Ekaterina Sokiryanskaya, Director of the Centre for Conflict Analysis and Prevention, wrote on the Facebook.

After the August 2017 attack on policemen at the fuelling station in Kaspiysk, experts noted that IS militants moved to individual (solo) terror acts, which require minimum organizational efforts and funds.

Full text of the article is available on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’.

Author: Gor Alexanyan Source: CK correspondent

All news
НАСТОЯЩИЙ МАТЕРИАЛ (ИНФОРМАЦИЯ) ПРОИЗВЕДЕН И РАСПРОСТРАНЕН ИНОСТРАННЫМ АГЕНТОМ ООО “МЕМО”, ЛИБО КАСАЕТСЯ ДЕЯТЕЛЬНОСТИ ИНОСТРАННОГО АГЕНТА ООО “МЕМО”.

July 02, 2024 17:53

  • Blogger detained in Dagestan after criticism from republic head

    Sergey Melikov, the head of Dagestan, stood up for a doctor from Khasavyurt, who had faced threats and attacks after a misunderstanding during examination of a patient wearing a niqab. After Melikov's criticism, law enforcers detained the blogger Khadjimurad Khanov, who had earlier demanded from the doctor's bosses to apologize, sources report.

July 01, 2024 19:35

  • ECtHR finds rights violation of Ingush activist Barakh Chemurziev

    The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has ordered Russian authorities to pay EUR 5000 to convicted activist, Barakh Chemurziev, as compensation for his arrest at the rally in Magas. The ECtHR's decision was made amid Russia's refusal to enforce the Court's decisions.

July 01, 2024 19:07

June 30, 2024 23:58

June 30, 2024 23:55

  • Kadyrov criticizes Bastrykin for his words about attackers in Dagestan and Rostov-on-Don

    The hostage taking in the Rostov SIZO (pre-trial prison) and the attacks in Dagestan were committed by "Islamists," Alexander Bastrykin, the Chairman of the Investigating Committee of the Russian Federation (ICRF), has stated and supported the idea of banning niqabs (long garments worn by some Muslim women in order to cover their entire body and face, excluding their eyes).

News archive