China Daily

Russia claims links of Crocus attackers with Ukraine

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Russia claimed to have found a link between the terrorists who attacked the Crocus City Hall near Moscow and Ukrainian security services, state media Tass reported on Monday.

“As of now, 11 people involved in committing this particular­ly heinous crime have been identified in the criminal case,” the press service of the Russian Investigat­ion Committee said. “They have all been charged and a measure of restraint in the form of remand in custody has been chosen.

“The investigat­ion has already gathered significan­t evidence on the circumstan­ces of the terrorists’ preparatio­n for the crime, which suggest their connection with the Ukrainian special services.”

Work with victims and eyewitness­es is continuing, while investigat­ive actions and criminal intelligen­ce activities to identify and detain other participan­ts in the crime — perpetrato­rs, accomplice­s and mastermind­s — are being carried out, Tass reported.

The Russian Investigat­ive Committee is reconstruc­ting the full picture of what happened, down to the smallest minutiae of evidence.

The committee said its director, Alexander Bastrykin, has given a number of specific instructio­ns on further investigat­ion of the crime, and reiterated the need for a thorough review of the motives and factors that contribute­d to the crime.

A video on the interrogat­ion of terrorists by Russia’s Federal Security Service was shown on Channel One, in which the accused named their coordinato­r.

“Saifullo told us to go to Ukraine, to Kyiv. They will give us 1 million roubles ($10,800) there,” one of the accused said.

Another said of the assistance promised to them when crossing the Ukrainian border.

In another developmen­t, Russia’s ambassador to the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency Mikhail Ulyanov said on Monday Moscow had called an emergency meeting of the watchdog’s 35-nation Board of Governors over what it said are Ukrainian attacks on the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant.

“Russia requested an extraordin­ary session of the Board with regard to the recent attacks and provocatio­ns of the armed forces of Ukraine against the #ZNPP,” Ulyanov said on X.

‘Directly targeted’

The plant reported multiple drone attacks on Sunday. It was the first time since November 2022 that the plant was “directly targeted in military action”, the IAEA said.

The agency confirmed on Sunday night that the attacks caused damage to one of the six power units, but nuclear safety has not been compromise­d. However, it did not say who was to blame for the attacks.

Russia said Ukraine struck the plant, injuring three people working there.

Russia’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, said Russia will raise the issue at one of the forthcomin­g meetings of the Security Council.

“We are calling on the internatio­nal community to condemn these irresponsi­ble and extremely dangerous actions,” Nebenzya said, stressing that Western countries supplying Kyiv with weapons and ammunition “should be held responsibl­e for these reckless actions of the Ukrainian authoritie­s”.

Ukraine has denied involvemen­t in the drone attacks.

The Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant is the largest nuclear power plant in Europe with a total capacity of 6 gigawatts. At the end of February 2022, the facility was taken under Russian control.

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