Vilayat Dagestan Вилайят Дагестан | |
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Leaders | Rasul Makasharipov (Emir Rasul) † Rappani Khalilov (Rabbani) † Ilgas Malachiyev (Emir Abdul Madzhid) † Omar Sheikhulayev (Emir Muaz) † Umalat Magomedov (Emir Al Bara) † Magomed Vagabov (Emir Seyfullah) † Israpil Velijanov (Emir Hassan) † Ibragimkhalil Daudov (Emir Salikh) † Rustam Asildarov (Emir Abu Muhammad) † Said Kharakansky † |
Dates of operation | 2002 – 7 October 2007 (As Shariat Jamaat) 7 October 2007 – 7 February 2017 (As Vilayat Dagestan) |
Active regions | Russian North Caucasus (Dagestan) |
Part of |
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Allies | Vilayat Galgayche United Vilayat of Kabarda, Balkaria and Karachay Vilayat Nokhchicho |
Opponents | Russian Federation Azerbaijan United States of America |
Battles and wars | the Second Chechen War, Insurgency in the North Caucasus |
Vilayat Dagestan (lit. 'Province of Dagestan'; Russian: Вилайят Дагестан, romanized: Vilayyat Dagestan), formerly known as Shariat Jamaat, was an Islamist Jihadist group based in the Russian republic of Dagestan and is part of the Caucasus Emirate.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The group is closely associated with the separatist conflicts in the nearby Russian republics of Chechnya and Ingushetia, and was created during the Second Chechen War in favor of Dagestan's independence as an Islamic state.
The Jamaat Shariat claims to be "legitimate authority of Dagestan" with the aim of establishing a "fair society" based on sharia law. To achieve this end, the Jamaat considers it legitimate to target police and security officials and some civilians such as the government-loyalist Muslim clergy and clerics of the Russian Orthodox Church,[7] and has been responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Russian security and military personnel, officials, and civilians.
The Jamaat says that peace talks with Russia are hypothetically possible, but only when Russia withdraws its troops from the region and provides security guarantees. Otherwise, the group claims, it is prepared for a long-term guerrilla war of attrition that may be broadened to encompass the whole of the Russian Federation, including Moscow and St. Petersburg.[7] As of 2010, the ongoing violence has plunged the multiethnic and corruption- and poverty-plagued republic into near civil war.[8]
fighters
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).