「chechen」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 172件
egan bombing Grozny airport and destroyed the | Chechen Air Force (former Soviet training aircraft re |
rs were killed and about 20 were wounded when | Chechen and Ingush policemen fired on each other on t |
Union, created on January 15, 1934 by merging | Chechen and Ingush Autonomous Oblasts. |
Chechen and Ingush nationalists and activists, upon h | |
ten considered a transitional dialect between | Chechen and Ingush, though it displays distinct featu |
April 20 - Federal forces and | Chechen and Dagestani police conducted a joint operat |
26, 2002), earlier known as Suleimanov, was a | Chechen and militia leader during the Second Chechen |
On January 15, 1934, | Chechen and Ingush Autonomous Oblasts were joined int |
ya, the Soviet government deported the entire | Chechen and Ingush population. |
Such an arrest would have been a violation of | Chechen and Dagestani customs of hospitality. |
The insurrection provoked many | Chechen and Ingush soldiers of the Red Army to desert |
e airless freight trains (others, such as the | Chechen aul of Khaibakh, were massacred en masse inst |
me reports, Barayev was captured alive by his | Chechen blood enemies in the GRU, and died at the Kha |
Apti Magamayev - | Chechen boy |
r the fact that the Russian military captured | Chechen capital Grozny in 2000 during the Second Chec |
he large village of Tsotsin-Yurt south of the | Chechen capital Grozny. |
taropromyslovsky city district of Grozny, the | Chechen capital, according to survivors and eyewitnes |
ehabilitation programme in Chechnya targeting | Chechen children who have been injured and traumatize |
Rights (ECHR) agreed to try cases brought by | Chechen civilians against the Russian government. |
ourth anniversary of the killing of scores of | Chechen civilians by Russian soldiers in Grozny in th |
he incident was fate of the group of about 74 | Chechen combatants who had surrendered on March 21, 2 |
Presidential Palace), eventually forcing the | Chechen command to abandon it. |
in which he said the "military phase" of the | Chechen conflict had been completed. |
Concert Hall 15 minutes prior to the popular | Chechen dance show Vainakh due to perform there. |
Following the | Chechen declaration of independence, he became a supp |
Khizir Aldarov, the "head of the | Chechen diaspora" and representative to the Georgian |
nds, causing serious structural damage in two | Chechen districts, and left 52,000 people without pow |
cised suicide bombings and hostage-takings by | Chechen extremists and has campaigned for peace talks |
in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic, to a | Chechen family that had been expelled from Chechnya d |
ver leadership of the Caucasus Emirate to the | Chechen field commander Aslambek Vadalov, only to ret |
tercepted a recorded conversation between two | Chechen field commanders in which they discussed usin |
Chechen field commander Shamil Basayev took responsib | |
rge, Abkhazia, in October 2001 between ethnic | Chechen fighters and Abkhazian forces. |
ng between the troops and the still-conscious | Chechen fighters continued in other parts of the buil |
nd even extremely cruel executions of wounded | Chechen fighters (beating to death, burning alive and |
The main | Chechen forces began to escape on the last day of Jan |
Neptune is ambushed by | Chechen forces, and fights their way through the vill |
ities, as animals that had once populated the | Chechen forests have moved off to seek safer havens. |
The rebel | Chechen government denied it was responsible for the |
On August 24, 2004 a | Chechen group calling itself "The al-Islambouli Briga |
f the bombings, a firefight broke out between | Chechen guerillas and soldiers, killing three more so |
According to | Chechen guerrilla sources, at least 20 soldiers were |
Khasan is regarded as the most influential | Chechen guerrilla leader during the Second World War, |
ts would continue to hunt the remnants of the | Chechen guerrilla opposition in the North Caucasus un |
Chechen Guerrilla (includes 'Operation Offshore') - J | |
milar drug such as 3-methylfentanyl to subdue | Chechen hostage takers. |
Ilyas Khamzatovich Akhmadov ( | Chechen: Ilyas Xamzat Axmadkhant/Ильяс Хамзат АхмадКI |
t had to be postponed due to the October 2001 | Chechen incursion into the lower Kodori Valley. |
in Chechnya, withdrawal of Russian forces and | Chechen independence, threatening to execute his host |
- November 7, 1942) was one of the leaders of | Chechen insurgency against the Soviet Union in the 19 |
Arbi Barayev, a | Chechen insurgent commander and organized crime leade |
N ambush occurred on April 18, 2002, when the | Chechen insurgents killed about 21 and wounded seven |
ngs happened on July 2-July 3, 2000, when the | Chechen insurgents launched five suicide bomb attacks |
In 1941, he joined a | Chechen insurrection led by Khasan Israilov. |
-3, 2004 - A group of armed mostly Ingush and | Chechen Islamic terrorists took more than 1,100 peopl |
Khasan Israilov ( | Chechen: Israilkhant- Hasan/Исраил КIант Хьасан) (191 |
n: Башир Вараев, born February 23, 1964) is a | Chechen judoka who competed for the Soviet Union in t |
It comprised six okrugs: Balkar, | Chechen, Kabardian, Karachay, Nazran (Ingushetia), an |
adding the | Chechen language as a state language alongside Russia |
people have been killed in a shootout between | Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov's bodyguards and suspec |
The detainee believed the | Chechen leader to be a great leader and soldier who t |
ev junior was said to be a sworn enemy of the | Chechen leader and elected president, Aslan Maskhadov |
was officially opened in a ceremony in which | Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov spoke and was with Russ |
ic states, but also to the positive relations | Chechen leader Dzhokhar Dudayev enjoyed with both the |
The detainee was asked by a | Chechen leader to go and fight. |
67-1996) was a notorious criminal boss of the | Chechen mafia and head of a Chechen armed faction, he |
ian: Исламский полк особого назначения) was a | Chechen militant organization formed in 1998. |
May 2000 and after the full-scale offensive, | Chechen militant resistance throughout the North Cauc |
Chechen militants of the CMPC later left Abkhazia to | |
age-taking at a theatre in Moscow, Russia, by | Chechen militants. |
ding to Litvinenko, Rose slandered separatist | Chechen minister Usman Ferzauli alleging that Ferzaul |
December 9, 2006, Qoqaz News, the | Chechen Mujahideen online news agency, reported that |
ns were able to stand ground with the help of | Chechen Muslims, led by Imam Shamil. |
Ultimately, | Chechen officials said 83 people were killed (48 on t |
kar Autonomous Okrug on January 16, 1922; and | Chechen Okrug, which was transformed into the Chechen |
The | Chechen OMON Chief of Staff, Buvadi Dukhiyev, was mor |
al campaign, Russian military and pro-Russian | Chechen paramilitary forces faced Chechen separatists |
eality, however, relations between Israilov's | Chechen partisans and the Germans were tense at best, |
thing closer to "Melkhi", but the common (via | Chechen perhaps) rendering is "Malkh". |
blood vengeance by the relatives of a killed | Chechen police officer. |
, issued a call to the Ingushetians to resist | Chechen police raids. |
A dozen members of pro-Moscow | Chechen police and militia forces who had run out of |
a report of mass execution of the ethnically | Chechen population of the aul of Khaibakh, in the mou |
a concern with the desperate condition of the | Chechen population, and was also driven by a fear of |
He also stated that Georgia should make the | Chechen position more understood to the West and coun |
Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov has been openly phot | |
9 May - Assassination of the Pro-Russian | Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov in Grozny. |
sources - Khedizhi) Mangerieva, a widow of a | Chechen rebel commander of Kurchaloyevsky District, R |
already unsuccessfully tried to persuade the | Chechen rebel commander Shamil Basayev to do this in |
n Chechnya, said the bombing was organized by | Chechen rebel field commanders Abu al-Walid and Shami |
Chechen rebel leaders denied involvement. | |
n July 12-13, 2004, when a large group of the | Chechen rebel guerillas entered the large Chechen vil |
hitigov (Amerikanets, Marine) was a prominent | Chechen rebel field commander in Shalinsky District o |
n but encounter various challenges, including | Chechen rebels, along the way. |
siege was considered a major disaster for the | Chechen rebels, of which hundreds were killed in or n |
liban in Afghanistan due to their support for | Chechen rebels. |
In 1995 he was appointed Chief Mufti of | Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. |
the acting Russian federal prosecutor of the | Chechen Republic Baskhanov signed an order to initiat |
1999 he was the Chairman of the Parliament of | Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. |
d an attempt to destabilize conditions in the | Chechen Republic." |
This was because of a | Chechen rising that had gone on since 1941 (see 1940- |
Having abandoned his official post of the | Chechen security minister after he had fled from besi |
torture practices believed to be used by the | Chechen security detachments known as Kadyrovites. |
Although | Chechen separatist activity was confirmed to be dimin |
hnya, he oversaw military intelligence in the | Chechen separatist government of Aslan Maskhadov. |
March 8 - | Chechen separatist President Aslan Maskhadov was kill |
According to the | Chechen separatist website Kavkaz Center, three heavy |
Its original leader (amir) was the | Chechen separatist commander Shamil Basayev. |
The Russians quickly implicated the | Chechen separatist field commander Shamil Basayev in |
3 October - Moscow theater hostage crisis: 40 | Chechen separatists seize a theatre in Moscow taking |
ary 1996, the local airbase was raided by the | Chechen separatists in the course of the Kizlyar raid |
Chechen separatists called Geliskhanov "a private per | |
station was the site of a terrorist attack by | Chechen separatists that occurred shortly after 8 pm |
Some | Chechen separatists also carried out terrorist attack |
g the outbreak of violence between Moscow and | Chechen separatists, Kadyrov famously declared that " |
ers) were the Arab Mujahid Ibn Al-Khattab and | Chechen Shamil Basayev, and was active in the War in |
The protagonists, a Russian swineherd and a | Chechen shepherd (played by Ladynina and Vladimir Zel |
9, in a major setback for the Russian forces, | Chechen snipers killed one of the Russian commanders, |
In 2004, a previously unknown and allegedly | Chechen Sufi group, Gazotan Murdash, claimed responsi |
ing occurred on December 27, 2002, when three | Chechen suicide bombers ran vehicles into the heavily |
d that the bombs were triggered by two female | Chechen suicide bombers, Grozny residents Satsita Dzh |
himself was assassinated by his half brothers | Chechen Tayiji and Zotov in a coup in 1670. |
but an internal strife with his half brother | Chechen Tayiji involved the Khoshuud. |
001 until his own, Movsar was the leader of a | Chechen terrorist militia known as the Special Purpos |
A previously unknown | Chechen terrorist group claimed responsibility for th |
He expects more | Chechen terrorist attacks in Russia, at both civilian |
the Moscow theater massacre of 2002, in which | Chechen terrorists took an audience hostage and 130 p |
Dr. Roshal negotiated with | Chechen terrorists during the Moscow theater hostage |
competitions, and he had to overcome several | Chechen traditions, including one that forbids men fr |
, were to serve as liaison officers to ethnic | Chechen troops who had, according to federal sources, |
afeyev participated in military action in the | Chechen unit under the command of Pavel Grabbe and wa |
st the mountaineers, commanding the so-called | Chechen unit. |
95 he was killed during military operation in | Chechen village of Samashki, and was awarded posthumo |
Colonel Azer Rustamov, in 1992, "hundreds of | Chechen volunteers rendered us invaluable help in the |
During the Second | Chechen War he did not active take part in hostilitie |
the Battle of Komsomolskoye during the Second | Chechen War in March 2000, when a large number of cap |
hiev was born in 1961 and fought in the First | Chechen War as a field commander. |
unter-insurgency operations during the Second | Chechen War have been conducted by the Russian army i |
At the beginning of the First | Chechen War of 1994-1996, Geliskhanov took part in th |
or captured by the Russians since the Second | Chechen War began. |
d by Dying For The President about the Second | Chechen War and Children of the Secret State about Ko |
st major act of violence linked to the Second | Chechen War in Ingushetia and the first major rebel r |
Kadyrov fought prominently in the First | Chechen War on the Chechen side as a militia commande |
Main article: Guerrilla phase of the Second | Chechen War (2008) |
Main article: Guerrilla phase of the Second | Chechen War (2001) |
Main article: Guerrilla phase of the Second | Chechen War (2003) |
Main article: Guerrilla phase of the Second | Chechen War (2000) |
After the Second | Chechen War Djokhar were renamed to Russian called Gr |
9, a month before the beginning of the Second | Chechen War, the President of Ichkeria Aslan Maskhado |
ctions in 2000 NTV was critical of the Second | Chechen War, Vladimir Putin and the political party U |
took part in military action during the First | Chechen War, and a daughter, Fatima. |
of its remaining members fought in the Second | Chechen War, in which its former leaders died (Khatta |
Kremlin during the early phase of the Second | Chechen War, argued that female Baltic snipers actual |
In February 2000, during the Second | Chechen War, she and her son Idris were arbitrarily d |
During the Second | Chechen War, the Army was commanded by General Vladim |
During the First | Chechen War, she was actively involved in anti-war pr |
rights and argued strongly against the First | Chechen War. |
gave Khattab a poisoned letter during Second | Chechen War. |
Six months have passed since the start of the | Chechen war. |
Britain to help Vladimir Putin in the Second | Chechen War. |
Its part of the Caucasian Front of the Second | Chechen War. |
February 5 - Second | Chechen War: Novye Aldi massacre. |
March 4-March 25 - Second | Chechen War: Battle of Komsomolskoye. |
A | Chechen warlord Khozh-Akhmed Dushayev was blamed for |
v, born 1979, was the nephew of the notorious | Chechen warlord Arbi Barayev who allegedly worked und |
2) was the widow of Arbi Barayev, a notorious | Chechen warlord. |
According to some sources, he fought in both | Chechen Wars on the side of Chechen separatist forces |
During the First and Second | Chechen Wars, the destruction of petroleum reservoirs |
unction with the post-Soviet First and Second | Chechen Wars. |
He was married to a | Chechen wife, with whom he had two surviving sons. |
e head and then burned), at least six younger | Chechen women (including the eight-months-pregnant 21 |
He would also marry two | Chechen women. |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |