Testimonies

General information about the collected documentation in the Natalia Estemirova Documentation Center Database


The Natalia Estemirova Documentation Center Database (hereinafter the Database) encompasses 63,157 documents containing information about the situation in the entire North Caucasus region – including Ingushetia, North Ossetia and other republics – between 1992-2018. Overall, 43,726 documents in the Database concern the Chechen Republic. The majority of these documents (41,374) contain information about the incidents which took place between 1999-2009, namely the active phase of the conflict in the Chechen Republic.

The Database is unique in that it accumulates materials from public sources (mass media, the Internet, books) as well as those collected by employees of well-known human rights organizations (diaries, photographs, procedural documents).

The scope of materials collected by human rights organisations is broad. They cover the periods of both the first and second Chechen conflicts, as well as the post-war era. The materials include descriptions of killings, kidnappings and disappearances of citizens, as well as special operations carried out in settlements using military equipment, including the shelling and bombardment of cities and villages, and the destruction of private property.

The organizations have collected an extensive amount of materials with information on missing persons, including transcripts of interviews with the relatives of missing persons which have exposed details of the circumstances surrounding the kidnappings, and the state bodies to which they have subsequently applied with regard to the violations. Where possible, relatives have also submitted correspondence with law enforcement agencies, as well as photographs of the disappeared victims, which have subsequently been registered and stored in the Database. Additionally, relatives of missing persons have allowed the Memorial staff to take photographs of passports, military tickets and other documents connected to the victims of the conflict. These documents have also been stored in the Database and linked to corresponding victims’ profiles.

The majority of the documents are in Russian (56,323) and the remainder are in English.

The Database also stores 5,595 images depicting various consequences of the conflict. This includes images of disappeared people and their relatives; individual and mass graves; corpses found displaying signs of severe torture; destruction of houses and other property; and public demonstrations and rallies.

Materials stored in the Database can be divided into the following groups:

The first group includes documents in the form of profiles of disappeared people which have been created on the basis of testimonies provided by relatives. Such materials contain detailed personal data of the victim, information about the circumstances of the violation, and measures taken by the family or state bodies to find their whereabouts.

The second group consists of procedural documents provided by relatives of the disappeared people. These include in particular: interrogation statements from those who have been granted victim status; witness statements; examination reports from the scene of the crime and reports of other investigative actions taken; and decisions relating to the granting of victim statuses, the suspension of criminal cases, as well as rulings of courts of different instances, such as declaring a disappeared person to be legally deceased. Relatives have retained these procedural materials in the hope of finding those missing who have become trapped in the war and have disappeared without a trace.

The third group accumulates eyewitness accounts of the bombings and shelling of settlements (zachistkas), life in camps for internally displaced persons, and the difficulties experienced by individuals once they returned back home to the Chechen Republic following the termination of war hostilities in some regions. This group of documents also includes applications submitted by relatives to human rights organizations requesting assistance in ascertaining the whereabouts of the disappeared people.

Each information source is used to create and search profiles of each victim in the Database. Each name mentioned in the materials was individually registered in the Database. The Database also gives the possibility to create different status profiles of an individual. For example, the same individual could be a victim in one incident, and a witness in another. This allows for a more structured understanding of the conflict and the ability to identify all existing connections between different people. For some individuals, several profiles can be registered in the Database with different information donors. This is especially true for victims of large-scale bombings or special operations, which attracted the attention of many human rights and international organizations.

For example, information about the killing of 18-year-old Elza Kungaeva by former Colonel Yury Budanov in 2000,[1] was recorded by three different human rights organizations. Therefore, three profiles of E. Kungayeva are registered in the Database. Each of these profiles contains information that was obtained by each separate organization.

Due to this method, there are currently a total of 92,323 victims, who suffered in the Chechen Republic during the conflict, registered in the Database. However, this may not be reflective of the actual number of victims of the conflict.

The analysis of all materials has allowed for the collection of the most accurate information relating to each victim and violation. Each victim is analyzed using all of the collected documents and a single verified profile is created based on all source-profiles. All corresponding information available from the information donors is indicated in this single verified profile. In some cases, different sources may contain contradictory information – for example, conflicting information may be provided regarding the date or circumstances of the violation. In such cases, the information is either directly verified and confirmed with the sources, or if not possible, the discrepancies in the data are indicated in the profile.

Through this verification process, 22,947 unique profiles have been created for each victim from the source-profiles. Each profile contains the most accurate data relating to the victim, such as the victim’s health status, profession, distinctive features and the place of burial, information relating to the violation (date and place of the violation, circumstances, factors that caused the violation, status under humanitarian law), and the outcomes of complaints to national authorities, human rights organizations and the ECtHR.

It should be noted that the Database not only contains the profiles of those whose names were identified but also those whose first and last names could not be established. Such victims, both individuals and groups of individuals, were registered collectively as nameless victims, with currently 2,901 such profiles. Accordingly, these are groups of individuals ranging from two to 50 people, depending on the information provided. Such victims were registered, for example, in the following way: “Four young people from the village of Novye Aldy detained on June 4, 2006”. Nameless individual victims were registered in a similar manner: “A young teacher killed as a result of a mine explosion in a village. Chiri-Yurt, October 2000”. Profiles of nameless victims were created with sufficient to register a profile and specific information about the victim and the violation. Due to the absence of any individualized information, however, they are deemed to be unsuitable for the verification process and are therefore not included in the number of victims when generating statistics on the victims of the war in the Chechen Republic.

This integrated and comprehensive approach to documentation in the Natalia Estemirova Documentation Center Database has allowed for the creation of the most accurate picture of the conflict in the North Caucasus.

The relevant statistics were updated on 10 April 2026.

The data is subject to change in view of the ongoing work by the Natalia Estemirova Documentation Center on the search and identification of victims of the armed conflict.


Media library


References

[1]RIA Novosti, “The killing point in the case of Elza Kungaeva”, June 10, 2011, https://ria.ru/20110610/386794477.html.