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Extremist Nationalists Suspected In The Terror Attack On Nevsky Expr

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  • Extremist Nationalists Suspected In The Terror Attack On Nevsky Expr

    EXTREMIST NATIONALISTS SUSPECTED IN THE TERROR ATTACK ON NEVSKY EXPRESS

    AZG DAILY
    01-12-2009

    Russia

    The confirmed death toll from the crash of the Nevsky Express train
    that occurred Friday evening on the Moscow-St. Petersburg line stands
    at 25, Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu told the crisis
    management conference at the crisis management center, which began
    shortly after midnight, hours after the incident.

    "Twenty three died instantly and two others, in hospital," he said.

    "Hospitals in the Novgorod and Tver regions have accommodated 87 of
    those injured, and St. Petersburg hospitals, 15," the minister said.

    "The whereabouts of 27 people who are known to have been on the train
    remain unclear," Shoigu said.

    The train was carrying 682 people - 653 passengers and 29 crew -
    coach attendants and engine drivers, Itar-Tass reported.

    According to Russian news agencies, a criminal investigation has been
    instigated under article 205 (terrorist attack). RIA Novosti quoted a
    source in the Novgorod law enforcement services as saying that police
    were looking for a man aged about 30 and a woman in a silver VAZ-2109.

    Earlier, police chief Rashid Nurgaliyev described one of the suspects
    as a stocky red-headed man about 40 years old.

    The train left Moscow at 7 pm. The bomb exploded at about 9:40 pm
    under the locomotive of the train while it was traveling at about 200
    kilometres an hour on the Aleshinka-Uglovka section of the railroad,
    near the northern border of the Tver region. According to police
    sources cited by the Kommersant daily, the bomb, estimated at about
    7 kilogrammes in TNT equivalent, contained a mix of explosives that
    included ammonium nitrate, which was responsible for the flare that
    passengers on the train reported seeing. The bomb was buried under
    the right rail and was reportedly activated via a wire attached to
    the detonator, explosives experts cited by the paper said.

    The second bomb, placed near an electric pole a few metres from the
    rail, went off at 2 pm on Saturday, just as Alexander Bastrykin, chief
    of the Russian Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General's
    Office, was touring the scene of the previous blast.

    The blast had all the trappings of a previous attack on the same Nevsky
    Express on August 13, 2007, Kommersant reported. Then, 60 people were
    injured. Although extremist nationalists were initially suspected
    in the attack, two Ingush nationals, Maksharil Khidiyev and Salambek
    Dzakhiev, were arrested for bringing the explosives. They were said
    to have been acting on the orders of former military serviceman Pavel
    Kosolapov and Chechen militant warlord Doku Umarov, both of whom are
    subjects of an Interpol search.

    Kosolapov was named as a possible suspect on Sunday, Kommersant
    reported, adding that he is also described as stocky and red-headed.

    But it had not yet been confirmed whether Umarov was linked to the
    latest blast, police sources said.
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