R5,
It's not that your assertion quoted below it 100% false. It isn't.
Neither is it 100% true.
It's one side of a coin.
And now, the other side of that coin:
Apr 6, 2022 ... On October 23, 2002, militant Chechen separatists took over the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow, Russia. For three days, they held some 800 ...
Please excuse this truncated post. Schedule intervenes. More later.
{...
The
Moscow theater hostage crisis, also known as the
2002 Nord-Ost siege, was the seizure of the crowded Dubrovka Theater in
Moscow by
Chechen terrorists on 23 October 2002, resulting in the taking of 912 hostages. The attackers, led by
Movsar Barayev, claimed allegiance to the
rebel breakaway movement in Chechnya.
They demanded the withdrawal of Russian forces from
Chechnya and an end to the
Second Chechen War. The crisis ended when Russian security services released
sleeping gas into the building, and subsequently stormed it, killing all 40 hostage takers. 132 hostages died, largely due to the effects of the gas.
Due to the layout of the theater, special forces would have had to fight through 30 metres (100 ft) of corridor and advance up a well-defended staircase before they could reach the hall in which the hostages were held. The attackers had numerous explosives, with the most powerful in the center of the
auditorium.
Spetsnaz operators from
Federal Security Service (FSB)
Alpha and
Vympel, supported by a
Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD)
SOBR unit, pumped a chemical agent into the building's
ventilation system and began the rescue operation.
The identity of the gas was not disclosed at the time, although it was believed to have been a
fentanyl derivative.
A study published in 2012 concluded that it had been a mixture of
carfentanil and
remifentanil.
The same study pointed out that in a 2011 case at the European Court of Human Rights, the Russian government stated that the aerosol used was a mixture of a fentanyl derivative and a chemical compound with a narcotic action.
...}
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_theater_hostage_crisis
It is not hard to sympathize with Chechen separatists since Russia has a history of being heavy handed.
But I do not fully understand the motives of such violence in this particular event?
But if your point is that Russia is not all that multi-ethnic tolerant, I tend to agree.