guardian.co.uk,
Reuters in Moscow, Thursday 9 August 2012
A member of the Fayzarahmanist sect at its base near the Russian city of Kazan. Photograph: Nikolay Alexandrov/AP |
Seventy
members of an Islamist sect in Russia have been found living in an underground
bunker without heat or sunlight on the outskirts of the city of Kazan,
according to Russian media.
The sect
members – including 20 children, the youngest of whom was 18 months old – are
thought to have been underground for nearly a decade.
Many of the
children were born underground and had never seen daylight until the
prosecutors discovered them on 1 August. After health checks, a 17-year-old
girl turned out to be pregnant.
The group,
known as the Fayzarahmanist sect, was named after its 83-year-old organiser
Fayzrahman Satarov, who declared himself a prophet and his house an independent
Islamic state, according to a report by state TV channel Vesti.
Satarov was
described as a former deputy to a Sunni Islamic cleric in the 1970s. His
followers were encouraged to read his manuscripts and most were banned from
leaving their eight-storey underground bunker, which had been dug in the
basement of a building, Vesti said.
Prosecutors
have opened a criminal investigation into the sect and have said it will be
disbanded if it continues its illegal activities, such as stopping its members
from seeking medical assistance or education.
No arrests
have been made although police are likely to look into suspicions that some of
the children were being abused. A court will decide whether the children will
be allowed to stay with their parents.
Kazan is
497 miles east of Moscow in Tatarstan, a majority Muslim internal Russian
republic.
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