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In page Fatima Tlisova:

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On October 8, 2006, one day after the murder of Anna Politkovskaya in Moscow, she sent her 16-year-old son on an errand and he failed to return. Eventually she traced him to a police station in the custody of a drunken policeman who had put his name on a list of Chechen sympathizers. According to human rights advocates, people on these lists are usually savagely beaten, and may even vanish forever.[citation needed] In an interview with Jim Heintz of the Associated Press, Tlisova explained her desire for asylum, saying "Do you know what these lists are? These are lists of broken lives. The fact that a drunken policeman can drag an innocent young man into a police station in broad daylight and put him on such a list - I didn't want that to happen to my son."[2]