A female suicide bomber attacked a bus in southern Russia yesterday,
authorities said, killing at least six people in the deadliest such
blast outside the
volatile North Caucasus region in nearly three years.
The bombing in Volgograd was likely to raise fears of further attacks by Islamist militants as Russia
prepares to host the 2014 Winter Olympics in February in the Black Sea
resort city of Sochi, not far from the mainly Muslim North Caucasus.
The attack, which investigators blamed on a 30-year-old woman from
Dagestan, the North Caucasus province at the centre of an insurgency,
also wounded 32 people, of whom eight were in critical condition, the
federal Investigative Committee said. State television showed footage,
taken from a camera mounted on a driver’s dashboard, of an explosion
ripping through the bus as it travelled along a tree-lined road, sending
shards of metal and glass flying. Passengers scrambled out of doors and
windows after the bus had stopped.
“There was a blast – a bang – all the glass flew out of the windows,”
an eyewitness named Ivan, who had been driving behind the bus, told
state-run Rossiya-24 television. “The cloud of smoke quickly dissipated
and then I saw people start to fall out and run out to escape the bus,”
he said.
“It was a horrible sight.” Citing a regional investigative source,
the Interfax news agency said identity documents belonging to the
suspected bomber were found near the site, and that she was believed to
have been the wife of an Islamist militant. The federal Investigative
Committee named the suspect as Naida Asiyalova, 30, of Dagestan. “This
woman got on the bus at one of the stops and the explosion occurred
almost immediately afterwards.
This was confirmed by the surviving passengers,” Investigative
Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said. “The blast was big, it was
huge,” Vladimir, a man who said his daughter survived the bombing, told
Ekho Moskvy radio.
“When I came to pick her up, half the bus was simply not there. It
was scary. Very scary,” he said. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility. Volgograd is a city of around 1 million people that lies
900 km (560 miles) southeast of Moscow and a few hundred kilometres
north of the North Caucasus and Sochi, at the western end of the
Caucasus range, where Russia will hold the Winter Olympics.
President Vladimir Putin has staked his reputation on the Games and
ordered authorities to boost security in the North Caucasus, where the
Islamist insurgency is rooted in two post-Soviet wars pitting Chechen
separatists against the Kremlin.
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