Shamil Basayev, the ruthless Chechen rebel leader 
responsible for terror attacks that led to the deaths of more than 800 people, 
was killed Monday when a dynamite-laden truck in his convoy exploded in this 
village of red brick houses next to a muddy field. 
 
 
   Chechen warlord Shamil 
 Basayev speaks in Grozny, in this Wednesday, October 28, 1999, photo. 
 Russian agencies reported Monday July 10 2006 that Basayev has been 
 killed. FSB head Nikolai Patrushev told President Vladimir Putin that 
 Basayev had been killed overnight in Ingushetia, the ITAR-Tass news agency 
 reported. [AP] | 
 
 
 
 
The blast that killed Russia's most-wanted man, who had a US$10 million 
bounty on his head, appeared to have been an accident. Basayev died along with 
three other militants in this village in Ingushetia, a republic plagued by 
sporadic spillover violence from neighboring Chechnya, where Russian forces have 
battled separatists for a dozen years. 
Basayev, 41, was emblematic of the radicalization of the Chechen rebel 
movement, which began as a secular fight for independence, and its increasing 
domination by Islamic extremists. His death, while a huge victory for Russian 
President Vladimir Putin's fight against terrorism, will probably not end an 
insurgency that has spread to communities across Russia's predominantly Muslim 
south. 
"I am sure that the explosions will stop, but the Caucasus is far from 
peace," said Susanna Dudiyeva, whose 13-year-old son was one of 331 victims 
killed in the 2004 Beslan school siege, which Basayev orchestrated. 
Russian television showed charred remains of the truck that exploded and two 
damaged cars next to a wrecked building. A corpse, apparently that of a rebel, 
lay on the ground with the clothes in shreds. The village is two miles east of 
Nazran, Ingushetia's biggest city. 
Ingush Deputy Prime Minister Bashir Aushev said Basayev's body had been 
identified "through some of the fragments, including his head," the Interfax 
news agency reported. 
Federal Security Service chief Nikolai Patrushev told Putin in a televised 
meeting that Basayev and many other rebels lost their lives in a special 
operation overnight in Ingushetia. He said the rebels were planning a terror 
attack to "put political pressure on the Russian leadership" during the Group of 
Eight summit in St. Petersburg this week. 
Patrushev said the operation to eliminate Basayev was "thanks to the 
(Russian) intelligence position abroad," though he did not elaborate. 
RIA-Novosti quoted an unidentified high-ranking security official in southern 
Russia as saying that Russian intelligence had been tipped off about Basayev's 
whereabouts from his close entourage. 
"This is deserved retribution for our children in Beslan, for Budyonnovsk, 
for all the terrorist attacks that they committed in Moscow and in other regions 
of the Russian Federation including Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic," Putin 
said, adding that everyone who took part in the operation should get state 
medals. 
However, Ingush authorities said the explosion occurred mistakenly during a 
special police operation against rebels who were preparing a terror attack for 
later Monday. 
An Ingush regional Interior Ministry official said that Basayev was 
killed while accompanying a truck filled with 220 pounds of dynamite that blew 
up in Ekazhevo early Monday. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity 
because he was not authorized to talk to the press, said Basayev was among four 
militants killed.