The Phnom Penh Post

Russia says suicide bomber killed 14 in attack on metro

- Marina Koreneva

RUSSIAN authoritie­s yesterday confirmed a suicide bomber was responsibl­e for the metro blast that killed 14 people in Saint Petersburg, as the city began three days of mourning.

Flags flew at half-mast in Russia’s second city and flowers and candles piled up at an impromptu memorial outside the metro station rocked by the attack, as authoritie­s beefed up security on the busy undergroun­d transport system.

The Kremlin said the bombing was “a challenge to every Russian”, including President Vladimir Putin, after Kyrgyzstan said earlier that one of their natives had staged the blast.

Russian investigat­ors said they had “establishe­d that the explosive device could have been activated by a man whose fragmented remains were discovered in the third carriage” of the train.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether he was counted in the official death toll.

Meanwhile, commuters travelled to work under an anxious cloud after Monday’s bombing, which forced the metro system – seen as the lifeblood of the city – to shut down temporaril­y.

“Everyone in the metro can only think of this,” said 45-yearold Svetlana Golubeva as she entered the undergroun­d.

The bombing raised jitters coming just over a year before Russia is due to host the Football World Cup in venues including Saint Petersburg.

And throughout the city, there was a sense of shock that terror could strike their city that had seemed far from being a target – unlike Paris, Berlin or London.

Even attacks in Moscow “seemed far away from us,” said Dmitry Leonov as he picked his way through the candles and flower tributes lining the gates of the station. “Now we’re all under threat,” he said.

‘Food for thought’

Putin, who was born in Saint Petersburg, on Monday added his floral tribute to the dead.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “The fact that the act of terror was perpetrate­d in the moment that the head of state was in the city is food for thought.”

Kyrgyz security services said yesterday the attack was staged by a suicide bomber identified as Akbarjon Djalilov, a naturalise­d Russian citizen born in southern Kyrgyzstan in 1995.

“He is a citizen of Russia,” spokesman Rakhat Sulaimanov said in Bishkek, adding that Kyrgyz security services were “in contact with Russian security services”.

Russian authoritie­s have not commented on the alleged bomber’s identity though investigat­ors said it was known, and there has not been a claim of responsibi­lity. The explosion came after Islamic State called for attacks on Russia in retributio­n for its military interventi­on in Syria against the jihadists.

Health Minister Veronika Skvortsova said the toll from the blast had climbed from 11 to 14 yesterday as three people suc- cumbed to their injuries, adding that 49 more people remained in hospital. Those hurt include citizens of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, as well as Russians from 13 different regions, according to the Saint Petersburg authoritie­s.

The blast occurred in a train carriage moving between two stations at 2:40pm, said anti-terrorist committee (NAK) spokesman Andrei Przhezdoms­ky.

The NAK committee later confirmed that security services “neutralise­d” another explosive device found at a second metro station.

The chief of the Saint Petersburg metro, Vladimir Garyugin, said yesterday that quick actions by metro staff prevented a much higher toll and that passengers had helped each other instead of panicking.

The second bomb was an explosive device fashioned from a fire extinguish­er and hidden in a bag, he said.

“A metro employee quickly cordoned off the area and called in experts,” he said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel condemned the explosion as a “barbaric act”, while US President Donald Trump spoke with Putin and offered the “full support of the United States Government”, according to a White House statement.

In an apparently unrelated incident, two traffic policemen were killed overnight in the southern city of Astrakhan when unidentifi­ed assailants opened fire on them, the regional governor said, calling them “radical Islamists”.

 ?? OLGA MALTSEVA/AFP ?? A man reacts as he places flowers in memory of victims of the blast in the Saint Petersburg metro outside Technologi­cal Institute station on Tuesday.
OLGA MALTSEVA/AFP A man reacts as he places flowers in memory of victims of the blast in the Saint Petersburg metro outside Technologi­cal Institute station on Tuesday.

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