Court sentences pair for hammer attack on Chechen blogger

A Swedish court has sentenced a man and a woman to 10 and eight years in prison respectively for attempted murder and accessory to attempted murder in a hammer attack on a blogger and critic of the Chechen leader, Ramzan Kadyrov.

The pair, who were not named by the Gavle district court, assaulted Tumso Abdurakhmanov on 26 February 2020 in his home in Gavle, 106 miles (170km) north of Stockholm.

In a statement, the court said the assault was planned and added that “the victim and the perpetrator had no relationship to each other”.

Abdurakhmanov was assaulted with a hammer by a man who told the Chechen he came from Moscow, the Swedish news agency TT said. He survived the attack.

TT said it was clear to the prosecution that the man attacked Abdurakhmanov and that the woman had started a relationship with Abdurakhmanov in order to facilitate the attack and allow the attacker to enter the apartment.

The blogger’s lawyer, Jens Sjölund, told the Swedish broadcaster SVT that his client had hoped for a longer sentence because he feared he might be attacked again.

In a separate statement, Daniel Stenling, head of the Swedish security police’s counterintelligence unit, said in “the last five years, other countries’ activities and operations on Sweden have intensified”.

He added that the police unit “has previously noted how other countries act to undermine fundamental human rights and freedoms in Sweden. Through persecution, threats and even attempted murder, people are forced to refrain from expressing their opinions.”

Moscow has relied on Kadyrov to stabilise Chechnya after two separatist wars and has run the predominantly Muslim region as his personal fiefdom, relying on its feared security forces to enforce his rule and quash dissent. International human rights groups have accused Chechen authorities of abductions, torture and killings of their opponents.

The Chechen leader has rejected allegations of involvement in attacks on his critics abroad, claiming that they were performed by foreign spies to compromise him and tarnish Russia’s image.

The court said the two people convicted must also jointly pay damages to the victim of 140,000 kronor (£16,960) plus interest.

source: theguardian.com