| 17 December | ||
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1996: Aid workers killed in Chechnya Six Red Cross workers have been shot dead as they slept in a hospital in Chechnya. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said they were murdered in their beds in the village of Novy Attagi, 11 miles South West of the capital Grozny. The murders took place at about 0400 local time when masked men broke into the hospital which is a clearly marked Red Cross centre. The murdered aid workers were a Dutch architect and nurses from New Zealand, Canada, Spain and Norway. They had been working at the hospital since September, when it was set up inside a school using funds from the Norwegian Red Cross, especially to care for victims of Chechnya's 21-month war. It is the bloodiest attack on aid workers in the 130-year history of the humanitarian agency. The ICRC has now taken the decision to withdraw its international staff from the area although some remain in Grozny.
The Red Cross has said it cannot draw any conclusions as to who was responsible for these attacks. The hospital employs 15 foreigners and 180 locals but none of the latter were hurt. It has led to suggestions the motive behind the attack was political and aimed at disrupting the republic's elections on 27 January. The medical unit was set up just as a peace settlement was being negotiated between rebel leaders and the Kremlin. Russian troops have been pulling out but many rebels had pledged there would be no peace until there was total independence from Moscow. |
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