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  • <description>Leila, 23, mother of two and widow of Vaha Hamhoev, 31, a policemen killed in Nazran explosion. Vaha had to become a policeman, because he could not find any other decent job in Ingushetia. Before his death he only worked at the police station for 3 months</description>
  • <description>The portrait of Imam Shamil, political and religious leader of the Muslim tribes of the Northern Caucasus in XIX century, painted on a wall at the entrance to an Islamic University in Makhachkala</description>
  • <description>Gulnara Rustamova, the co-chair of Mothers of Daghestan for Human Rights</description>
  • <description>The explosion site outside of Kaspiysk, Daghestan, pictured a day after</description>
  • <description>Photos of the rebels wanted are hanged outside the Ministry of Interior of Daghestan in downtown Makhachkala </description>
  • <description>The village of Gubden in Daghestan, known as a Salafi stronghold, seen from the mountainous road </description>
  • <description> Patimat Sharipova, 52, the mother of the Moscow suicide bomber Mariam Sharipova</description>
  • <description>Abidat Sharipova, 69, the grandmother  of the Moscow suicide bomber Mariam Sharipova has now taken her bedroom in the mountainous village of Balakhani in Daghestan</description>
  • <description>Baskhan Abrullakhmanova, 60, is the oldest student of the madrasa in the village of Balakhani, that Mariam Sharipova, the Moscow suicide bomber, also attended </description>
  • <description>A student of madrasa in the village of Gubden in Daghestan, known as a Salafi stronghold</description>
  • <description>A street in Balakhani, the Daghestani village where the Moscow suicide bomber Mariam Sharipova was born and grew up</description>
  • <description>A boy is running down the street in the village of Gubden, Daghestan's most famous Wahhabi stronghold </description>
  • <description>
Umatgirei Kartoev, 68, from the village of Ekazhevo in Ingushetia, whose 4 sons were killed and 3 detained in the security operation on March 2, 2010. Five houses belonging to Kartoev family were exploded by the security forces</description>
  • <description>The destroyed kitchen of Umatgirei Kartoev. Mr. Kartoev's 4 sons were killed and 3 detained in the security operation on March 2, 2010 in the village of Ekazhevo in Ingushetia. Five houses belonging to Kartoev family were exploded by the security forces</description>
  • <description>The site of the March 2, 2010 security operation in the village of Ekazhevo in Ingushetia, 4 members of Kartoev family were killed and 3 detained, and five houses were exploded by the security forces </description>
  • <description>The heavy armored traffic police post on a highway Nazran-Grozny in Ingushetia </description>
  • <description> The widow of Musa Khautiev, 27, and his 1-month-old baby. Musa was killed on August, 7, in his home in the village of Kantyshevo in Ingushetia, in a security operation, involving about 500 armed men</description>
  • <description>The family of Khautives is mourning the death of their two relatives, Musa and Adam, who were found dead in their house after the security operation on August, 7, in which, family says, around 500 armed men participated. They believe that the younger brother Adam, 22, was killed somewhere else, and his body was brought to the house after the operation, because they haven't seen him for more than a year after he went to study in Egypt. Older brother, Musa, 27, was killed in the security operation</description>
  • <description>Rashid Inalov is visiting a grave of his brother Uruskhan, 30, who was killed by the security forces in August 2009. Rashid himself went missing in December 2009, when he was detained on a train while coming back to Ingushetia from Samara where he studied</description>
  • <description>A torn-apart blanket outside of a house that was stormed by Russian security forces in Ekazhevo, Ingushetia </description>
  • <description>Akhmed Kotiev, the head of Nazran police and his aide now have to work in the half-destroyed building after the explosion in the police station</description>
  • <description>An archive photo of Batyr Albakov (courtesy of Albakov's family) from the times he was studying in the college. Batyr, 26, an airport engineer, was kidnapped by armed men in July 2009 and later found dead and proclaimed a rebel
</description>
  • <description> Funeral of Vaha Hamhoev, 31, a policemen killed in Nazran explosion. Vaha had to become a policeman, because he could not find any other decent job in Ingushetia. Before his death he only worked at the police station for 3 months</description>
  • <description> Funeral of Vaha Hamhoev, 31, a policemen killed in Nazran explosion. Vaha had to become a policeman, because he could not find any other decent job in Ingushetia. Before his death he only worked at the police station for 3 months</description>
  • <description>Funeral of Vaha Hamhoev, 31, a policemen killed in Nazran explosion. Vaha had to become a policeman, because he could not find any other decent job in Ingushetia. Before his death he only worked at the police station for 3 months </description>
  • <description>The site of the special operation in the village of Ekazhevo held on March 2, 2010, in which, Russian authorities said, the rebel ideology leader Said Buriatsky was killed</description>
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