been arrested. From the replies of those State authorities it appeared that the applicant's daughter was not being held in the ROVDs of the Chechen Republic; she had not applied to medical institutions for assistance; there were no compromising materials ("компрометирующий материал") on her.
36. According to a reply from the deputy head of CP, that authority had not carried out any special operations in Assinovskaya on 19 January 2004; Luiza Mutayeva had not been taken to any penal institutions in the North Caucasus Region.
37. On 28 April 2004 the applicant was granted victim status in criminal case No. 49516 and her procedural rights and obligations were explained to her.
38. Being interviewed as a victim on 28 April 2004, the applicant submitted, among other things, that on 19 January 2004 unidentified persons had told her to open the door for an identity check. Subsequently, several armed men in camouflage uniforms and masks burst into the house. They had asked the applicant in Russian where the men were. The applicant had pointed at her husband, explaining that he was the only man in the household. The intruders had checked the family members' identity papers and told the applicant's daughters to get dressed. Meanwhile the intruders had turned everything in the house upside down. They had told Luiza Mutayeva to follow them to their vehicle for questioning. When the applicant protested the armed men replied that they would question Luiza Mutayeva and then let her go. The applicant had wanted to follow her daughter outside but had been held in the house. Having nonetheless managed to get outside, she had seen Luiza Mutayeva, handcuffed, near a white GAZ minivan without number plates. The applicant had also seen about six or seven vehicles, including an UAZ vehicle, two UAZ military all-terrain vehicles ("таблетка"), a VAZ-2109 and a VAZ-2107 vehicle. Despite the applicant's attempts to stop them, the abductors had left with her daughter. The applicant also submitted that in December 2003, according to local custom, Luiza Mutayeva had been abducted for marriage by a man from Urus-Martan. She had only stayed with that man for two weeks. When the elders had come to the applicant to pay the bride-price and the family had learnt about Luiza's whereabouts, they had taken her back home.
39. The applicant's husband and daughter Madina, questioned on 28 April 2004, gave similar descriptions of the circumstances of Luiza Mutayeva's abduction.
40. B.A., the applicant's neighbour, interviewed as a witness on 28 June 2004, submitted that he had learnt from the applicant that at about 3 a.m. on 19 January 2004 about fifteen armed men in masks and camouflage uniforms had abducted Luiza Mutayeva from her parents' house in Assinovskaya. The intruders had arrived in a convoy of vehicles, including a Gazel minivan, several UAZ and VAZ-2107 and VAZ-2109 vehicles.
41. The applicant's neighbour, L.V., interviewed as a witness on an unspecified date, stated that during the night of 18 - 19 January 2004 she had heard several vehicles in the street. On 20 January 2004 she had learnt from the applicant about the abduction of Luiza Mutayeva by armed men in camouflage uniforms.
42. Ms L.G., interviewed as a witness on an unspecified date, submitted that she had learnt from fellow residents in Assinovskaya that on 19 January 2004 Luiza Mutayeva had been abducted by armed men in camouflage uniforms, who had arrived in a GAZ minivan and several UAZ and VAZ vehicles without number plates. Similar submissions had been made by the applicant's neighbours and acquaintances Kh.A., S.M., Kh.G., T.D., Kh.M., A.B., A.M., A.A., I.M., M.M., A.At., D.M., Kh.Yu., P.T., M.Me., L.A., A.Am., R.A., M.Kh., M.S, M.D., Z.B., M.T., B.B., Kh.D., F.D., R.Kh., A.Al., Kh.G., T.K., B.A., S.A., A.S., L.Ts., S.Am., M.T., Sh.A., R.Ts., M.A., B.Ts., who were in
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