Chechnya: Doctor Works To Save Lives --
Chechen and Russian
By Irina Lagunina
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Russian troops are continuing their military campaign in the breakaway
republic of Chechnya. The exact number of both military and civilian
casualties is not known. Human rights groups accuse the Russian forces
of
targeting hospitals and clinics, especially in the Chechen capital
Grozny.
But little is known about the situation in the villages. RFE/RL
correspondent
Irina Lagunina reports about the story of a doctor who has witnessed a
great
deal of bloodshed.
Washington, 22 May 2000 (RFE/RL) -- Last fall, the Chechen government
of
Aslan Maskhadov ordered medical personnel to provide assistance to the
villages affected by the war in Chechnya. One of the doctors who
followed the
directive was Khasan Baiyev, a dentist by profession who became a
surgeon
during the first Chechen war of 1994-1996.
Baiyev took his medical equipment, moved to the small village of
Alkhan-Kala
in the outskirts of Grozny and, with the help of the local population,
started the hospital that had been abandoned at the beginning of the
war.
Baiyev says that last October, 17 wounded were brought to the hospital.
The
hospital lacked basic medical supplies. Baiyev says he was forced to
use an
ordinary saw to conduct amputations.
The Russian troops also delivered their own wounded to the hospital.
Baiyev
says he was negotiating a ceasefire, trying to convince them that there
were
no Chechen fighters in the village. But the village remained under fire
and
there were from 30 to 50 wounded every day needing treatment.
Baiyev said at a recent briefing conducted at the Washington
headquarters of
RFE/RL that his commitment to treating victims on all sides during the
war
had infuriated both Russian officers and some Chechen gunmen who
captured
Alkhan-Kala this January. Says Baiyev:
"They seized me, dragged me into the hospital and started to shoot with
machine-guns at my feet and above my head, saying that I opened the
hospital
for the Russian soldiers. I said that I opened the hospital for those
who
need medical help."
In a few days, the Chechen group left the village and the Russian
federal
forces came in. They also wanted to shoot the doctor. Baiyev continues
his
story:
"They seized me and put me to the wall saying that I was treating the
Wahhabis (members of a strict Muslim sect). Then one of them said
'we'll have
enough time to execute him, let's use him as a shield in the street
fighting.
They will not shoot at doctor.' When they finally put me to the wall to
execute me the old men, women, and children -- all in all about 30
people --
stood in front of me and said 'If you want to shoot our doctor shoot
him
together with us.'"
The Russian federal forces left and on January 31 the village was once
again
crowded with wounded Chechen rebels who tried to find some medical help
after
having left Grozny through a Russian minefield. As Baiyev describes it,
the
hospital was full, even the corridor and the stairs were packed with
wounded.
He conducted more then a hundred surgeries in two days. Baiyev says the
second patient he had these days was the well known Chechen commander
Shamil
Basaev. The Russian military jets bombed the hospital several days
later when
they found out that Basaev was there, and the Russian authorities were
looking for the surgeon because he treated the famous rebel commander.
"I don't see people as terrorists or bandits or anything else. For me
they
are all patients. I am not a prosecutor. I simply followed the
Hippocratic
Oath."
But Baiyev says he was finally forced to leave the region and the
country for
treating the wounded of both sides of the war.