User:IzLu4249/Black Widow (Chechnya)

Lead
Black Widow (чёрная вдова, chyornaya vdova) or shahidka (шахидка—Russian feminine gender derivation from shahid), is a term for Islamist Chechen female suicide bombers, willing to be a manifestation of violent jihad. They became known at the Moscow theater hostage crisis of October 2002. The commander Shamil Basayev referred to the shahidkas as a part of force of his suicide bombers called the Riyad-us Saliheen Brigade of Martyrs. Basayev also stated that he himself trained at least fifty of the black widows. The female suicide bombers have carried out over 65% of the 23 terrorist attacks linked to the Chechen movement since 2000. The Black Widows are associated with the use of women in terrorists attacks in Chechnya between 1999 and 2005.

Russian and Chechen conflicts date back to 1785. Although the most recent phase started with the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 and lasted until 2017. In 1991, the Chechens won independence and kept it until 1999 when another conflict irrupted. In reaction to the Islamic groups headquartered in Chechnya invading Dagestan in 1999, Russian government forces launched an anti-terrorist campaign in the region. Early in the year 2000, Russia nearly entirely destroyed Grozny, and by late April, it had succeeded in bringing Chechnya directly under Moscow's control. This is when groups like the black widows went out for revenge.

The term of "Black Widows" probably originates from these women being widows of men killed by the Russian forces in Chechnya (the connotation of black widow spider is intended). The Black Widows wear black dresses and dark clothing that covers their bodies from head to toe. This attire is supposed to symbolize their personal losses from the Chechen wars. In 2003, the Russian journalist Yulia Yuzik coined the phrase "Brides of Allah" (Невесты Аллаха) when she described the process by which Chechen women were recruited by Basayev and his associates; the phrase was also used again after the Beslan attack, as the title of an installment of the Russian NTV programme Top Secret (Совершенно секретно)

Furthermore, to the terrorists black widows are considered less valuable than male terrorists, since male terrorists require formal training, while women terrorists are viewed as expendable. In some cases, when opinions do not match between black widows and male terrorists, male terrorists detonate bombs strapped onto black windows to get rid of them. Additionaly, women terrorists are strategically appealing because they symbolize opposing their traditional roles of being obedient. Between 1998 and 2001, according to professor Richard Pape of University of Chicago, the average death of suicide attacks have been 13 people, while the average for suicide bombers of Chechen is 28, meaning there are twice as more deadly then the average suicide bomber. Further, black widows tend to be younger than 30.

Motives
There have been claims by Yulia Yuzik, a Russian journalist and author of Bride's of Allah, many of the women have been sold by their parents to be used as shahidkas, others have been kidnapped or tricked. Independent journalists like Robert W. Kurz and Charles K. Bartles reject this view, stating that in most cases female Chechen suicide bombers do not fit this model. Mostly they are given no training at all in preparation for the suicides as no weapon skill is needed to strap on the explosives. Many do not even blow themselves up, but are blown up by remote control. However, Besayev, as stated above, reported that the women are trained for their mission. Michael Radu argued that these women are specifically trained for suicide attacks. Some black widows have brothers or close relatives who were killed in one of the two Chechen wars between Russia and Islamist rebels since 1994 or in clashes with Russian-backed forces. These women may be driven by grievances or they may feel it is the only option to get their viewpoint seen. Kurz and Bartles offer another view of their motives, arguing that these women are much more motivated by revenge, despair, and their drive for an independent state than by religious fundamentalism or individual honor. Woman in Chechnya were in no way controlled in the same way that women under the Taliban or Woman in the middle east were. The Chechen Women thought adopting to the full face coverings presented themselves as true believers and separated them from the rest of mainstream Chechen culture, which never had, and still has not, adopted this form of covering women They may feel that terrorism is a strategy when there is no peaceful outlet to affect politics or that it is the only option for people with extremist views. The Black Widows may be driven by the idea of Chechnya gaining independence from Russia or they may have joined the terrorist movement because they were brainwashed and needed a sense of belonging when their state was in political turmoil. It's important to note that the Black Widows rarely do interviews, so very little is known about their lives. After the Dubrovka theater attack, hostages gave mixed reports about what motivates the Black Widows. During the attack some female suicide bombers reportedly told hostages how their family members had been killed in the war and they felt they had nothing left, thus, meaning they were motivated by family connections. Others were raped by Russian Soldiers. Meaning in Chechnya's society they could not get married or have children. This bleak prospect made woman willing to give up their life in the name of Allah. Other hostages reported that some of the Black Widows only talked about the Koran, had extremist view points, and were hard to reason with. This suggests that the women, may be driven by ideals about religion or out of touch with reality and brainwashed by the men in their lives to join the cause.

When looking at the differences between suicide bombers and regular militants, the suicide bombers tend to be more educated, younger, and better off than non-suicide militants. Their choice can be engaging in a suicide mission or not engaging at all. However, once they are already radicalized, they are devout believers and willing to fight and this choice is gone. It is clear why terrorist groups prefer the use of suicide missions. They are more frightening, more lethal, leave no one behind to be questioned, and may be simpler to organize and carry out because escape routes are not necessary. Suicide bombs provide the group an advantage over their competition terror organizations since they show resilience, determination, and garner support from the public.Militants are willing to sacrifice their life in order to inflict terror and death on opposers. In the black widows case, Russia.

Media Depictions
The media depicts the female suicide bombers in two main ways, as motivated by the deaths of men in her life or as in a situation of hopelessness where she is forced into terrorism to get her voice heard. Both the Russian government and Chechen groups portrayed the Black Widows in these ways to support their respective positions. Chechen terrorist leaders emphasized women as victims to humanize the Russian-Chechen Conflict. Media coverage tends to show the female terrorists motives as emotional, such as due to loss of a relative, rather than ideological or political, such as gaining independence from Russia. The New York Times reported on Chechnya and Russia between 1994 and 2004 during the peak of the conflict; it's reports often questioned and speculated why women would join the Chechen terrorist groups and largely did not interview the Chechen's involved in the cause. A common media narrative about the Chechen Black Widows is that they joined due to family connections; because they were following men or avenging the deaths of their husbands. Women may also be portrayed as being a terrorist for 'the sake of love'; meaning they join because they have a personal connection to the organization, such as a husband or boyfriend in the organization. This narrative describes the female terrorists as femine and passive because they are following the men in their lives to join the terrorist organization. On the other hand, women may also be depicted as tough as a man and given more masculine qualities; and the media may question her femaleness.

In 1994, the Russian press began to note rumors of female suicide bombers and female snipers; these rumors were proven credible due to the occasional arrest and the known involvement of women in the attacks during the Russian-Chechen Conflict. On November 29th, 2001, journalists reported the attempted assassination of General Gadzhiyez by a Chechen female suicide bomber. This attack received relatively little attention from the western press, but may have been the first Black Widow attack. On October 23, 2002, the female terrorists gained international media attention when they seized the Dubrovka Theater. During this attack the female terrorists were filmed and interviewed by the press. This is one of the first times the Black Widows were able to speak for themselves in the media.

Notable Attacks

 * The main perpetrator Khava Barayeva is the first known ‘Black Widow’. She is the cousin of the well-known field commander warlord Arbi Barayeva and sister of Movsar Barayeva, head of the moscow commando. She and Luisa Magomadova were the first to attack and became known as the “Black Widows”. Before her attack Khava Barayeva made a martyr video. She claimed she was attacking for Chechen independence and tried to spread the message to others to do the same for honor. June 6, 2000, Khava Barayeva, who was only 17 years old at the time, drove a truck of explosives at a checkpoint of Omon, a base named Alkhan-Yurt. Barayeva detonated the bombs, which is reported according to the rebels 27 people had passed, while Russians claimed two killed five injured.


 * Medna Bayrokova, a resident of Grozny, said that she remembers the day a middle aged woman came to her front door asking to speak to her 26-year-old daughter, Zareta Bayrokova, who was a tuberculosis patient. Bayrokova let the woman in. Her daughter spent an hour in her bedroom with the woman, before leaving the house. Zareta Bayrokova died in the attack on the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow in 2002. Of the 41 terrorists in the attack on the Dubrovka theater 19 were female. The terrorists held around 800 people hostage at the theater for 3 days, until Russian forces regained control of the building.
 * In May 2003, Shakhida Baimuratova, a suicide bomber, killed 16 people and wounded 150 in an assassination attempt on then Moscow-appointed Chechen president Akhmad Kadyrov at a crowded Muslim festival in Ilishkan Yurt. A second woman bomber was also present but killed only herself.
 * On 5 June 2003, a woman detonated a bomb in a bus carrying Russian Air Force pilots in North Ossetia, killing twenty (besides herself) and injuring 14.
 * On 5 July 2003, two suicide bombers killed 16 people and injured six others at a rock concert at Tushino Airfield in Moscow.
 * In December 2003, a male and female suicide bomber killed 46 people and injured 100 others by detonating explosives on a packed commuter train, which had just left Yessentuki in Southern Russia. The woman is believed to have carried explosives in a bag, whereas the man had grenades strapped to his leg.[citation needed]
 * On 9 December 2003, a bomb exploded outside the Hotel National, Moscow just a few hundred metres from the Moscow Kremlin. It is thought that the target was the State Duma building and that the bomb had detonated prematurely. Six people died and 13 were injured in the blast. The suicide bomber was later identified as Khadishat Mangeriyeva.[citation needed]
 * On 6 February 2004, Georgi Trofimov, a Russian bomb disposal officer, was killed as he tried to defuse a device at a Moscow cafe. The failed bomber, ethnic Ingush Zarema Muzhakhoyeva, was sentenced to 20 years of imprisonment for terrorism in April 2004. In 2005, she participated in the trial of the Beslan hostage crisis terrorist Nur-Pashi Kulayev as a witness for the prosecution, but she withdrew all her statements about Kulayev that she made in pre-trial depositions and said she didn't know he was a militant.
 * Two Russian passenger aircraft disasters in 2004 are believed to have been the work of the Black Widows. The smaller of the planes, a TU-134 which crashed near Tula, had been carrying a Chechen woman called Amanat Nagayeva who had bought her ticket just an hour before the flight took off. The larger plane exploded near the city of Rostov killing 46 people. Among the wreckage, investigators found traces of hexogen, a powerful explosive. Another Chechen woman, Satsita Djerbikhanova, was also a last-minute passenger on this flight.
 * The Beslan school siege started on Wednesday, September 1, 2004, during the day of knowledge, which is a holiday that celebrates school starting. Because of this holiday, there were many children including parents in a school in Beslan, North Ossetia. At 9:30 AM, 34 terrorists stormed the school, including two female suicide bombers, taking more than one thousand hostages. On the first day, all of the hostages were taken to the school’s gym. There were more than a thousand hostages including parents, children, and teachers. The attackers then separated the adults that seemed the strongest, which were about fifteen to twenty people, into a corridor. Then explosions took place in the corridor. The explosions were the result of the female suicide bombers. Negotiations started with the terrorists with an individual named Leonid Rosha, a pediatrician, however, negotiations came to fail. On the second day, Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin made the statement that what is most important is the life of the hostages. Negotiations kept occurring, but none of them seemed successful. On the last day of the siege, two bombs detonated killing many hostages instantly, however, some of the hostages took this chance to flee. Russian forces also took this chance to move in. In the process of all of this, the roof collapsed killing more than a hundred hostages. In the end, all of the terrorists were killed and some were captured alive. Because of this incident, 325 people were killed and about 700 were wounded.
 * On 29 March 2010, nearly 40 people were killed and another 100 injured when two suicide bombers detonated explosives at two stations of the Moscow subway, the Park Kultury metro station and at the Lubyanka station. The attacks were linked to shahidkas by the Russian Government, although an investigation has yet to be undertaken. One of the perpetrators was Dagestani-born Dzhennet Abdurakhmanova (1992-2010), the widow of 30-year-old Umalat Magomedov who was killed by Russian forces on 31 December 2009.
 * On 24 January 2011, 35 were killed and 180 wounded in Domodedovo, Russia's busiest airport. Although the identity of those responsible for carrying out the attacks has not been officially confirmed, initial reports suggested that at least one Black Widow was involved, likely accompanied by a man.
 * On 7 March 2012, a widow of a militant killed on 10–11 February 2012 near a village, Karabudakhkent, 40 km (24 miles) south of Dagestan capital Makhachkala, killed herself and five police officers and wounded two others in Karabudakhkent.
 * On 28 August 2012, Sufi leader Said Afandi and six other people were killed in a suicide bomb attack in Dagestan. The attack was allegedly perpetrated by Russian Aminat Kurbanova who had converted to Islam. Her two former spouses were Islamic militants, and her third husband also believed to be a militant.
 * On 25 May 2013, a female suicide bomber, Madina Alieva, blew herself up in Dagestan, injuring at least 18. She was the widow of an Islamist killed in 2009.
 * On 21 October 2013, a female suicide bomber, Naida Asiyalova, blew up a Volgograd bus, killing six of the forty passengers.[citation needed]
 * On 29 December 2013, a female suicide bomber killed 16 people at a train station in Volgograd.
 * In January 2014, individuals claiming responsibility for the December bombings in Volgograd threatened a “surprise” for Russia and the Olympics. No attack took place.