Masked men, some wielding hammers, stormed the office of a human rights organisation in the southern Russian region of Chechnya on Wednesday, smashing computers, doors and office equipment. The Russian Committee Against Torture, one of only two independent rights groups in Chechnya, said on Twitter the attackers destroyed a car used by the organisation and forced their way into the building in the regional capital Grozny.
A Reuters witness on the scene shortly after the assault said windows had been smashed, office furniture broken, computers destroyed and documents strewn across the floor. Police arrived only after the incident was over, the witness said. The attack was the latest sign of tension in the mainly Muslim region where its leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has become increasingly hard for Moscow to control although he was appointed by the Kremlin.
Kadyrov has been accused of widespread rights abuses and heavy-handed tactics against dissenters, but denies the charges. It is not the first time the Grozny office of the Committee Against Torture, a non-governmental organisation which receives Western grants, has been raided. Staff have been beaten in previous incidents but fled the office safely this time. Moscow fought two wars against separatists in Chechnya in the decade after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and is now trying to put down an insurgency aimed at creating an Islamist state in the broader North Caucasus area.