Prime Minister of the Chechen Republic (25 May 2024-date; honorary president and board chairman, Akhmat FC; permanent member, Chechen Security Council
Lord; Timur Daudov; Магомед Хожахмедович Даудов; Лорд; Тимур Даудов; Magomed Hozhahmedovich Daudov; Magomed Hojahmedovich Daudov
June 2004-February 2005: Company commander, 2nd Regiment of the Patrol and Checkpoint Service. February 2005-November 2006: Battalion commander, Patrol and Checkpoint Service, Shalinskiy Rayon police. November 2006: criminal investigator for especially important cases, section for combatting abductions and people trafficking, Operational Search Bureau No.2 for Combatting Organised Crime. November 2006-April 2007: Deputy commander, head of the special forces police detachment headquarters. April 2007-September 2007: Acting head of the Shalinskiy Rayon police department. September 2007-March 2010: Head of the Shalinskiy Rayon police department. March 2010-May 2012: Appointed Chechen first deputy prime minister with responsibility for the security bloc. December 2011-July 2014: Appointed head of the Administration of the Head and Government of the Chechen Republic. July 2015-May 2024: In 2015, elected speaker (chairman) of the Parliament of the Chechen Republic, after the death from illness of his predecessor, Dukuvakha Abdurakhmanov. Reelected in October 2016 and October 2021.
Brief description
Magomed Daudov is Chechen Prime Minister, having previously served as parliamentary speaker. He is widely regarded as one of the most influential people in the regime of Ramzan Kadyrov and as one of Kadyrov’s potential successors.
Known associates
Person 1 | Person 2 | Details | Type of relationship | Core relationship |
---|---|---|---|---|
Novaya Gazeta identified Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov as an ally of Daudov. | Friendship | |||
In July 2017, Kavkaz Realii accused Daudov of trying to extort R30m from the head of the Chechen branch of Sberbank Rossii, Sayd-Magomed Dzhabrailov, who was placed on the federal wanted list when he refused to pay. Deputy Chechen Interior Minister Apty Alaudinov and Chechen General Prosecutor Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov reportedly in attendance at the meeting, which took place in the office of deputy prime minister Yakub Zakriyev. | Meeting | |||
In July 2017, Kavkaz Realii accused Daudov of trying to extort R30m from the head of the Chechen branch of Sberbank Rossii, Sayd-Magomed Dzhabrailov, who was placed on the federal wanted list when he refused to pay. Deputy Chechen Interior Minister Apty Alaudinov and Chechen General Prosecutor Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov reportedly in attendance at the meeting, which took place in the office of deputy prime minister Yakub Zakriyev. | Meeting | |||
Daudov repeatedly threatened opposition blogger Tumso Abdurakhmanov over the latter’s criticisms of the Kadyrov family and regime. | Acts against | |||
Alkhanov, Vakhid Osmayev, the head of the Administration of the Head and Government of Chechnya, and Daudov together mediated the conflict in Leninaul in July 2017, where Daudov was attacked with stones. | Meeting | |||
Deputy parliamentary speaker Aslambek Aydamirov was Daudov’s formal subordinate. | Employment relationship | |||
When Bobrov was appointed head of the local branch of the Investigations Committee, he opened criminal investigations into a number of high-ranking Chechen Interior Ministry officials, including those of the Shalinskiy OMVD; Daudov met with Bobrov, following which a key investigation was closed and two investigators dismissed. Bobrov went on leave in November 2013, and shortly afterwards resigned. | Acts against | |||
In July 2017, Kavkaz Realii accused Daudov of trying to extort R30m from the head of the Chechen branch of Sberbank Rossii, Sayd-Magomed Dzhabrailov, who was placed on the federal wanted list when he refused to pay. Deputy Chechen Interior Minister Apty Alaudinov and Chechen General Prosecutor Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov reportedly in attendance at the meeting, which took place in the office of deputy prime minister Yakub Zakriyev. | Acts against | |||
Deputy parliamentary speaker Roman Edilov was Daudov’s formal subordinate. | Employment relationship | |||
In 2019, Gadzhiyev used social media to criticise the construction of a traditional watchtower on the border between Chechnya and Dagestan; Daudov responded with a statement that labelled Gazdhiyev a “sad-excuse for a historian” and accused him of attempting to foment ethnic discord. | Acts against | |||
Daudov attended the wedding of Nozhay-Yurtovskiy police department head Nazhudi Guchigov and Kheda-Luiza Goylabiyeva in 2015. | Friendship | |||
Daudov attended the wedding of Nozhay-Yurtovskiy police department head Nazhudi Guchigov and Kheda-Luiza Goylabiyeva in 2015. | Friendship | |||
The biker group the Night Wolves, led by Zaldostanov, opened a Groznyy branch in 2015; Ramzan Kadyrov posted a photo of himself, Zaldostanov and Daudov holding the group’s flag as both were inaugurated as members. | Meeting | |||
There is a photo from a 2014 ceremony at the Kremlin, in which Daudov appears alongside Putin and Ramzan Kadyrov. | Meeting | |||
Ruslan Kutayev accused Apti Alaudinov and Magomed Daudov of torturing him while he was in custody. | Acts against | |||
In October 2016, Daudov reportedly beat up then acting chairman of Chechnya’s Supreme Court, Takhir Murdalov, in an effort to force his resignation. | Acts against | |||
Tamerlan Musayev was head of Magomed Daudov’s security detail. | Employment relationship | |||
Alkhanov, Vakhid Osmayev, the head of the Administration of the Head and Government of Chechnya, and Daudov together mediated the conflict in Leninaul in July 2017, where Daudov was attacked with stones. | Meeting | |||
There is a photo from a 2014 ceremony at the Kremlin, in which Daudov appears alongside Putin and Ramzan Kadyrov. | Meeting | |||
Journalist Maksim Shevchenko apologised to Ramzan Kadyrov in August 2019 for comments he had made, following a telephone call from Daudov. | Correspondence | |||
In 2016, Daudov apparently threatened Caucasian Knot Chief Editor Grigoriy Shvedov. | Acts against | |||
Abubakar Ustarkhanov was an unspecified relative of Magomed Daudov. | Familial relationship | |||
In July 2017, Kavkaz Realii accused Daudov of trying to extort R30m from the head of the Chechen branch of Sberbank Rossii, Sayd-Magomed Dzhabrailov, who was placed on the federal wanted list when he refused to pay. Deputy Chechen Interior Minister Apty Alaudinov and Chechen General Prosecutor Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov reportedly in attendance at the meeting, which took place in the office of deputy prime minister Yakub Zakriyev. | Meeting | |||
Salman Zakriyev is first deputy speaker of parliament and Magomed Daudov’s subordinate. | Employment relationship | |||
The biker group the Night Wolves, led by Zaldostanov, opened a Groznyy branch in 2015; Ramzan Kadyrov posted a photo of himself, Zaldostanov and Daudov holding the group’s flag as both were inaugurated as members. | Meeting | |||
Shaid Zhamaldayev is deputy speaker of parliament and Magomed Daudov’s subordinate. | Employment relationship |
In-depth profile
Date profile last updated: 20 November 2023
Magomed Daudov, the Chechen regime’s enforcer
Chechen parliamentary speaker Magomed Daudov is a key figure in the regime of Ramzan Kadyrov but lacks an independent power base.
Chechen Prime Minister Magomed Daudov is an important member of the inner circle of Chechnya’s leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, and a potential candidate to replace the ailing dictator. However, he appears to lack an independent power base or substantive ties outside the republic, significantly reducing his chances. Daudov is closely implicated in many of the regime’s worst human rights abuses and efforts to silence dissent in Chechnya, but has not yet been sanctioned by the European Union.
Overview
- Magomed Daudov: A key figure in the Chechen regime
- Daudov lacks independent power base or ties outside the republic
- Daudov’s key relationships – more enemies than friends
- Daudov’s rise within the Chechen elite
- Other controversies involving Daudov
- Digital Daudov: An avid user of social networks
- Gaps in the international response to Daudov, a consistent violator of human rights
Magomed Daudov: A key figure in the Chechen regime
Magomed Daudov started the Second Chechen War on the side of the separatist Chechen Republic of Ichkeria (Chechenskaya Respublika Ichkeria, ChRI) but quickly switched his allegiance to the pro-Russian regime being built by Akhmat Kadyrov. Since Akhmat’s son, Ramzan, assumed formal leadership of Chechnya in 2007, Daudov has established himself as a key member of the Chechen elite (Novaya Gazeta, 2017; Kavkaz Realii, 2016; Caucasian Knot, 2023).
Daudov was speaker of parliament between July 2015 and May 2024 (Caucasian Knot, 2023). He resigned from the role on 15 May 2024 and was appointed as Chechen Prime Minister on 25 May 2024 (Kommersant, 2024). He is simultaneously a permanent member of the Chechen Security Council; secretary of the Chechen branch of United Russia; a member of United Russia’s General Council Presidium and Leader’s Council; a member of the Russian Federal Assembly Council of Legislators; a member of the Russian Presidential Council Presidium for Developing Local Governance; and president of Akhmat FC (Parliament of the Chechen Republic, undated; FC Akhmat, undated).
Daudov is often referred to in the media as “Kadyrov’s right-hand man” (Fontanka.ru, 2021) and one of the most important people in Ramzan’s inner circle – alongside State Duma Deputy for Chechnya Adam Delimkhanov and Deputy Prime Minister Abuzayd Vismuradov (Kavkaz Realii, 2016).
Daudov implicated in many of the Chechen regime’s abuses
As a senior figure in the Chechen elite, Dadyrov has been implicated in many of the controversies and human rights abuses that characterise the Chechen regime. In particular, he has often been personally involved in the persecution of the regime’s critics and often responds on social media to alleged slights against the republic and its leadership. Some of the main scandals he has been involved are:
- In 2011, Daudov – then first deputy prime minister responsible for the security bloc – publicly criticised members of a jury who had acquitted alleged insurgents. Daudov pledged that the suspects would be punished irrespective of the court’s decision (Novaya Gazeta, 2017).
- In February 2014, activist Ruslan Kutayev organised a conference devoted to discussing the Stalin-era deportation of the Chechens, at which he criticised the policies of Ramzan Kadyrov. Daudov phoned Kutayev, but Kutayev ignored his phone call and did not attend a meeting at which Kadyrov criticised the conference’s participants. Kutayev was sentenced to four years in prison on drugs possession charges that human rights groups criticised as politically motivated. Kutayev accused Daudov, Chechen Deputy Interior Minister Apty Alaudinov, and Daudov’s bodyguard, Tamerlan Musayev, of torturing him. Daudov testified in Kutayev’s trial, denying both his involvement in torture and any political motivations behind the prosecution (Caucasian Knot, 2023; Human Rights Watch, 2014; Open Democracy, 2014).
- In October 2016, Novaya Gazeta and Kavkaz Realii alleged that Daudov beat up Takhir Murdalov, then acting chairman of Chechnya’s Supreme Court, demanding that he resign. Daudov reportedly threatened to kill Murdalov when he refused. A Groznyy TV report featured an audio recording in which Murdalov denied the claims (Kavkaz Realii, 2016).
- Also in 2016, Caucasian Knot Chief Editor Grigoriy Shvedov filed a complaint with the Investigations Committee over apparent threats that Daudov made towards him (Novaya Gazeta, 2017). In 2017, Novaya Gazeta alleged that many suspected homosexuals who had been interrogated in secret prisons as part of Chechnya’s persecution of local LGBTQ communities had identified Daudov as personally involved (Novaya Gazeta, 2017). Human Rights Watch issued a report containing similar accusations (Human Rights Watch, 2017).
- Also in 2017, Daudov responded to US sanctions against Ramzan Kadyrov with threats against alleged internal enemies who worked on behalf of the West. Daudov said: “I think it’s time to dispatch our enemies back to their bosses abroad or remove them from healthy society. If there weren’t a moratorium at present in Russia [implication: on the death penalty], it would be Salaam Alaikum to the enemies of the people and that would be the end of it” (Chechnya Today, 2017).
- In 2018 and 2019, Daudov became involved in a public dispute with opposition blogger Tumso Abdurakhmanov in response to the latter’s ongoing criticisms of the Kadyrov family and regime. In an audio recording posted on YouTube, Daudov declared a blood feud against Abdurakhmanov (Caucasian Knot, 2023; Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 2019).
- In August 2019, Russian journalist Maksim Shevchenko apologised to Ramzan Kadyrov for disparaging comments he had made; his apology followed a call from Daudov (Caucasian Knot, 2019). In the same year, Daudov – along with Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechen Nationalities Minister Dzhambulat Umarov, and a host of Chechen scholars and cultural representatives – criticised director Aleksandr Sokurov after Sokurov stated that Ramzan did not deserve the title Hero of Russia (Caucasian Knot, 2019).
Daudov’s involvement in key Chechen policies and events
Beyond persecuting opponents of the Chechen regime, Daudov has also played a prominent role in many of its key policies. For example, he has been actively involved in Chechnya’s border demarcation efforts, which have resulted in disputes with the neighbouring republics of Ingushetia and Dagestan (Open Democracy, 2019; Caucasian Knot, 2021). In July 2017, he was attacked by a crowd in the Dagestani village of Leninaul amidst a conflict between local Avar and Chechen communities (Caucasian Knot, 2017). In 2019, local historian Zurab Gadzhiyev used social media to criticise the construction of a traditional watchtower on the border between Chechnya and Dagestan. In response, Daudov labelled Gadzhiyev a “sad excuse for a historian” and accused him of attempting to foment ethnic discord (OC Media, 2019).
Daudov has also been a vocal supporter of Chechnya’s involvement in Russia’s “special military operation” in Ukraine and often – together with other high-ranking Chechen officials – attends ceremonies at Groznyy airport to mark their deployment. He acted as Ramzan Kadyrov’s deputy on a commission established in May 2014 to help people from Crimea and Ukraine who had left their permanent place of residence (Head and Government of the Chechen Republic, 2014). Early in the latest war, he was appointed head of the “republican operational headquarters for the special military operation (Meduza, 2022). In May 2023, Daudov was one of several Chechen officials to become involved in a public dispute with senior figures in the Russian private military company (PMC) Wagner (Meduza, 2023).
Daudov lacks independent power base or ties outside the republic
Arguably the main obstacle to Daudov succeeding Kadyrov – who is rumoured to be in ill health – is the weakness of his relations, which are mapped in the section below. Unlike any leadership contenders from within the Kadyrov family – in particular, the Delimkhanovs or Kadyrov’s sons, Adam and Akhmat – Daudov does not have relatives who are known to occupy strategically important positions in the broader Chechen state infrastructure. Nor is there anyone within his network who emerges as an obvious ally with sufficient influence to support his claim.
The weakness of Daudov’s relationships is also evident in his lack of connections to figures at the federal level. Unlike Adam Delimkhanov, or even Ramzan himself, Daudov’s connections are almost entirely within Chechnya’s borders (BBC Russian Service, 2018). Although Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed various appointments and awards for Daudov – including appointing him an Interior Ministry major-general in August 2023 (Kavkaz Realii, 2023) – the only photographic evidence of a meeting that is captured by a Yandex search comes from a Kremlin event in 2014 that was also attended by Ramzan (Courier-Media, 2019).
This network mapping suggests claims made by journalist Maaz Bilalov in 2016 remain valid today: “Daudov’s clan is not build on classic principles, i.e. there are not clearly defined political or some kind of other force on which he could rely […]. Daudov’s clan is in the main his multitudinous security service, which is prepared to offer him any support – but only for so long as he remains in power” (Kavkaz Realii, 2016). Indeed, his position today is arguably weaker now than it was then, given that he no longer directly controls any security service units.
Daudov’s key relationships – as many enemies as friends
Daudov’s family and personal background
Daudov is married and reportedly has twelve children (Parliament of the Chechen Republic, undated). He was born in the village of Shpakovskoye (today Mikhaylovsk) in Stavropol Kray, but his native village is considered to be Geldagan in Chechnya’s Kurchaloyevskiy Rayon. Several initiatives in the village have sought to demonstrate his prestige: a street and school were named after him in 2007 and 2008 respectively, and in 2010, construction began on a mosque named after his recently deceased mother, Makka Uvaysovna Daudova. His father, Khozhakhmed Abdulvakhabovich Daudov, died in 2013 (Heroes-Russia.ru, undated).
Abubakar Ustarkhanov, head of the police in Shalinskiy Rayon’s village of Avtury, was an unspecified relative on Daudov’s mother’s side of the family; he was shot dead on 3 January 2018 (Kavkaz Realii, 2018).
Some media sources refer to Ramzan Kadyrov’s children as Daudov’s nieces and nephews. This appears to originate from Daudov’s use of the terms in his Telegram channel; however, there is no blood relationship between them and Daudov is using this in a metaphorical sense (in the same way he calls Ramzan his “brother”). Daudov is a member of the Yalkhoy teip (Heroes-Russia.ru, undated), whereas Ramzan is from the Benoy teip.
Business interests
None reported.
Daudov’s rise within the Chechen elite
Education
Daudov completed middle school in Geldagan (Caucasian Knot, 2023). In 2004, he graduated from Dagestan State University with a qualification in economics and a specialisation in Finance and Credit. In 2009, graduated from the Makhachkala Institute of Finance and Law with a specialisation in jurisprudence. In 2011, he graduated from Management Academy of the Interior Ministry of the Russian Federation with a specialisation in jurisprudence (Parliament of the Chechen Republic, undated).
Professional background
Daudov linked up with ChRI fighters in the First Chechen War but was only 14 when that war started. He started the Second Chechen War still on the ChRI’s side and reportedly tried to join infamous rebel leader Shamil Basayev, but he soon switched to the federal side in response to an amnesty offered by Akhmat Kadyrov (Novaya Gazeta, 2017; Kavkaz Realii, 2016).
After being amnestied, Daudov’s official biography lists various appointments within the Chechen branch of the Interior Ministry (Parliament of the Chechen Republic, undated):
- June 2004-February 2005: Company commander, 2nd Regiment of the Patrol and Checkpoint Service.
- February 2005-November 2006: Battalion commander, Patrol and Checkpoint Service, Shalinskiy Rayon police.
- November 2006: criminal investigator for especially important cases, section for combatting abductions and people trafficking, Operational Search Bureau No.2 for Combatting Organised Crime.
- November 2006-April 2007: Deputy commander, head of the special forces police detachment headquarters.
- April 2007-September 2007: Acting head of the Shalinskiy Rayon police department.
- September 2007-March 2010: Head of the Shalinskiy Rayon police department.
The ‘political’ part of his biography began in 2010:
- March 2010-May 2012: Appointed Chechen first deputy prime minister with responsibility for the security bloc (Caucasian Knot, 2023).
- December 2011-July 2014: Appointed head of the Administration of the Head and Government of the Chechen Republic (Parliament of the Chechen Republic, undated).
- July 2015-May 2024: Elected speaker (chairman) of the Parliament of the Chechen Republic, after the death from illness of his predecessor, Dukuvakha Abdurakhmanov (Caucasian Knot, 2015). Reelected in October 2016 and October 2021 (Caucasian Knot, 2023). Resigned 15 May 2024 (Kommersant, 2024).
- May 2024-date: Appointed Prime Minister of the Chechen Republic on 25 May 2024 (Kommersant, 2024).
Other controversies involving Daudov
In May 2015, Daudov – at the time head of the Administration of the Head and Government of the Chechen Republic — sparked controversy when he suggested that polygamy should be legalised. Daudov insisted he was speaking in a private capacity. His comments came shortly after the head of the Nozhay-Yurtovskiy police department Nazhud Guchigov married a 17-year-old woman, Kheda-Luiza Goylabiyeva, despite reportedly already being married. Daudov reportedly helped Goylabiyeva obtain a passport in which the marriage was recorded (Gazeta.ru, 2015).
In July 2017, Kavkaz Realii accused Daudov of trying to extort R30 million from the head of the Chechen branch of Sberbank Rossii, Sayd-Magomed Dzhabrailov. The key meeting was reportedly attended by Apty Alaudinov and Sharpudi Abdul-Kadyrov and took place in the office of Yakub Zakriyev. Dzhabrailov was placed on the federal wanted list when he allegedly refused to pay (Kavkaz Realii, 2017).
Daudov has repeatedly expressed support for Adam Kadyrov, Ramzan’s son. In 2018, for example, he defended Adam over accusations the latter had participated in a rigged boxing match. In 2023, he backed him after a scandal erupted over a video showing Adam beating a detainee (Meduza, 2023).
Digital Daudov: An avid user of social networks
Daudov is highly active on Telegram, using the channel “Лорд.” (MDaudov_95). This was created on 27 February 2022. As of 14 November 2023, the channel had 1,000,669 subscribers and had posted 218 photos and 889 videos.
Daudov also runs a page on VK: https://vk.com/magomeddaudov
Daudov used to have an Instagram account, but he closed it in 2017 in response to Instagram’s decision to close the account of Ramzan Kadyrov (Life News, 2017).
Gaps in the international response to Daudov, a consistent violator of human rights
Daudov was sanctioned by the United States, alongside Alaudinov, under the Magnitskiy Act for the torture and kidnapping of Kutayev in 2014 (Office of Foreign Assets Control, undated; Kavkaz Realii, 2023).
He was sanctioned by the United Kingdom on 10 December 2020 under the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regulations 2020 for “the systematic arrest, torture, and murder of LGBT people in Chechnya since 2017. Daudov has also personally participated in the arrest, torture, and murder of LGBT people” (Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, undated).
Lithuania imposed an entry ban in 2017 under its version of the Magnitskiy Act (Deutscher Bundestag, 2019), as did Estonia (Err.ee, 2018) and Latvia in 2018 (Caucasian Knot, 2018).
Poland sanctioned Daudov after the invasion of Ukraine (Kavkaz Realii, 2023). Ukraine has not sanctioned him, although the Security Service of Ukraine opened a criminal case against him for participating in the creation of security service units engaged in aggression against Ukraine and travelling to Ukrainian territory occupied by Russia (Kavkaz Realii, 2023).
Remarkably, the European Union has not yet sanctioned him; nor has Canada.