×

We've got news for you.

Register on SowetanLIVE at no cost to receive newsletters, read exclusive articles & more.
Register now

rebel bombers strike again

MOSCOW - Militants will not be allowed to "sow fear and panic" in Russia, President Dmitry Medvedev said yesterday, after a series of bomb blasts in Moscow and Dagestan killed 51 people this week.

MOSCOW - Militants will not be allowed to "sow fear and panic" in Russia, President Dmitry Medvedev said yesterday, after a series of bomb blasts in Moscow and Dagestan killed 51 people this week.

"The terrorists' goal is the destabilisation of the situation in the country, the destruction of civil society, a desire to sow fear and panic," Medvedev told RIA-Novosti news agency.

Medvedev described Monday's twin suicide attacks in Moscow and double strikes in Dagestan yesterday as "all links in one chain".

Suspected suicide bombers killed at least 12 people in Russia's North Caucasus yesterday, two days after deadly attacks in Moscow that authorities linked to insurgents from the region.

The coordinated attack in the town of Kizlyar in Dagestan, neighbouring Chechnya, was the latest outbreak in a surge of violence in the Caucasus that is challenging the Kremlin a decade after a war against Chechen separatists.

The bombings in Dagestan came 48 hours after Moscow was hit by its bloodiest attack in six years - twin morning rush-hour blasts that killed 39. Authorities blamed female suicide bombers with connections to the North Caucasus.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said a single group could have been behind the bombings in Moscow and Dagestan.

"Yet another terrorist act has been committed. I do not rule out that it is one and the same gang acting," Putin said, calling the attacks "a crime against Russia".

He ordered Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev to bolster the police presence in the North Caucasus.

A suicide bomber dressed in a police uniform set off the second of two blasts in Kizlyar, which killed the town's police chief and several other officers, regional police and prosecutorial officials said.

The bomber pushed his way into a crowd of police and onlookers drawn by a massive car-bomb blast, officials said - a common tactic of North Caucasus insurgents, who have been attacking law enforcement authorities almost daily.

Televised footage showed two gutted cars and a deep crater on a debris-strewn street lined by bare trees, and a red brick schoolhouse with its windows blown out and roof partly ripped off. Reports said there were no children in the school.

A police official said a black four-wheel-drive Niva vehicle had exploded after traffic police tried to stop it, indicating a suicide bomber had been behind the wheel.

Russia's federal investigative committee, however, said the Niva had been parked when the blast occurred. The blasts killed 12 people, nine of them police officers, and 23 others were hospitalised.

A provincial police spokesperson said Kizlyar police chief Vitaly Vedernikov was among the dead.

In addition to police, an investigator from the prosecutor's office and a civilian were killed, Russian news agencies cited police assaying.

Dagestan, a predominantly Muslim province on the Caspian Sea with a patchwork of different ethnic groups, is plagued by violence stemming from the Islamic insurgency across the North Caucasus as well as criminal disputes and clan rivalries.

The Moscow metro attack fuelled fears of a broader offensive by rebels based in the North Caucasus.

It underscored the Kremlin's failure to keep militants in check and contain violence to the region along Russia's southern fringe. - Reuters

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.