Insurgency in Ingushetia | |||||||
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Part of the Second Chechen War and North Caucasus Insurgency | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
![]() ad hoc revenge groups | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
400 policemen killed (2005–2010)[3] 93 security forces killed (2010–2014)[4] | 182 killed (2010–2014)[5] | ||||||
800 killed overall between 2002 and November 2008[6] 71 civilians killed (2010–2014)[7] |
The Insurgency in Ingushetia (Russian: Война в Ингушетии, romanized: Voyna v Ingushetii) began in 2007 as a spillover of then ongoing separatist conflict in Chechnya into neighbouring Ingushetia. The conflict has been described as a civil war by local human rights activists and opposition politicians;[6] others have referred to it as an uprising.[8] By mid-2009 Ingushetia had surpassed Chechnya as the most violent of the North Caucasus republics.[9] However, by 2015 the insurgency in the Republic had greatly weakened, and the casualty toll declined substantially in the intervening years.[2][10]
detained
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
defeated
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tumbling
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