"The Kadyrovs were once rebels themselves. Then they switched sides. Since Akhmat's death, the Kremlin has relied on Ramzan and his armed militia to put down the insurgency and to rebuild Chechnya.
snip
There are sushi bars, beauty parlours, skyscrapers, even a "karaoke comedy club". Billions of dollars of aid from Moscow have funded the facelift and helped the Chechen capital rise from the rubble.
While rebuilding Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov is promoting what he calls "traditional Islam": it is making Chechnya feel less and less part of Russia.
snip
Alcohol is no longer freely available in the shops; there are segregated sports facilities for men and women; at the computer store, you can buy an iPad and pick up a free copy of the Koran; painted on the ceiling of my Grozny hotel room is an arrow pointing towards Mecca.
"I'm terrified. I think 10 years from now, we'll have raised a whole generation of religious extremists
Anonymous Chechen woman
Under Mr Kadyrov, there is also a stricter Islamic dress code. I meet one woman who tells me that she had been threatened for not wearing a headscarf in public.
She is deeply concerned by the policy of Islamisation. Fearing reprisals, the woman asks to remain anonymous."
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-19627632
The Russians not only use Chechens to invade other countries, but they even use them as expendable hit-squads to kill people within the country.
KGB Putin also sent jihadist Chechen “peacekeepers” to Lebanon in 2006 to protect Hizballah from Israel.
Russia has laws giving special protection to “historically Russian” religions — Islam among them.