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Celebrities Slammed For Attending Chechen Concert
The New York-based Human Rights Watch said that American actress Hilary Swank, Belgian actor Jean Claude Van Damme and British violinist Vanessa Mae attended the concert in the Chechen capital, Grozny. The Oct. 5 show was held at a police-cordoned stage on Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov’s 35th birthday.
Human Rights Watch urged the artists to “avoid legitimizing people like” Kadyrov, who has been accused by rights groups of having orchestrated abductions, extrajudicial killings and the enforcement of sharia law in Chechnya, a Russian republic.
“Ramzan Kadyrov is linked to a grim record of abuse,” the group’s Europe and Central Asia director Huge Williamson said in a statement. “When stars get paid to turn up to party with (Kadyrov), it trivializes the suffering of countless victims of human rights abuses.
The artists’ representatives were not immediately available for comment.
Kadyrov is a former separatist rebel who changed sides before the second Chechen war started in 1999. Respected human rights groups have documented disappearances, house torchings and extra-judicial killings, and say they have evidence of Kadyrov’s direct participation in torturing crime suspects.
Kadyrov has consistently denied involvement in any of the killings, saying the accusations are fabricated to blacken his name.
Dozens of Russian politicians, film and sports stars also attended the concert and praised Kadyrov from a stage arranged between a gigantic mosque and a newly built business center.
During the birthday show, Swank said that she has been taken by the Chechen government’s “passion to make peace and to make something beautiful.”
“I hope to have a film premiere here,” the two-time Oscar winner clad in a streaming evening dress said in remarks televised on Chechen state television. “Happy birthday, Mr. President.”
Action star Van Damme said he “spoke from his heart,” but mispronounced Kadyrov’s name and called Chechnya a “nation.”
The audience gave Kadyrov a standing ovation when the bullnecked and burly man performed a traditional Chechen dance during a song that praised his rule and called Chechnya “the center of the universe.”
Under Kadyrov’s leadership and backed by huge tranches of money from the federal budget, Chechnya has become relatively quiet. Grozny, left mostly in ruins by two wars, has risen from the rubble, and the insurgent violence that once gripped Chechnya has largely migrated to neighboring republics of the volatile Caucasus region.