Hindustan Times (Patiala)

METRO BLAST LEAVES 10 DEAD IN RUSSIA

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com n

SAINT PETERSBURG: Russia opened a probe into a suspected “act of terror” Monday after 10 people were killed and dozens more injured in a blast that rocked the Saint Petersburg metro.

Authoritie­s shut down the metro system in Russia’s second city as security services said they had also defused a bomb at a second metro station.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee said it was probing an “act of terror” but added it would look into all other possible causes of the blast. Pictures screened on national television showed the door of a train carriage blown out, as bloodied bodies lay strewn on a station platform.

Above ground, emergency services vehicles rushed to the scene at the Technologi­cal Institute metro station, a key transport hub in the city centre.

Health minister Veronika Skvortsova said the blast had killed seven people on the spot, with three more succumbing to their injuries later. Thirty nine people were hospitalis­ed, including a 15-year-old girl, Skvortsova said. “My mom was in the metro, I don’t know what’s happened to her, I can’t get hold of her,” one woman, Natalia, told AFP outside the station as she was trying to make a phone call on her mobile.

Pensioner Vyacheslav Veselov said he had seen four bodies. “A station attendant in tears called on the men to help carry the bodies,” he said. The blast occurred in a train carriage as it was travelling between the Technologi­cal Institute and Vosstaniya Square stations at 2:40pm local time, said an official.

The NAK committee later confirmed security services had found another explosive device at the Vosstaniya Square metro station. This device did not explode and it was immediatel­y “neutralise­d.”

The metro network in Saint Petersburg announced it was shutting down entirely after evacuating all passengers.

The Moscow metro also tweeted that it was “taking additional security measures” as required by law in such situations. NAK said in a statement carried by Russian news agencies that security was being stepped up at transporta­tion hubs and crowded places across the country.

Saint Petersburg announced three days of mourning in the city while President Vladimir Putin, who was holding a meeting nearby in his official Strelna presidenti­al palace, offered “condolence­s” to those hurt in the blast and to the loved ones of those killed.

Just hours after the blast, people began laying flowers by the Sennaya Square station.

“I was shocked,” said local resident Alexander Malikov. “I gathered my friends around and we came to put flowers here.”

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini wrote on Twitter she was following developmen­ts “together with all EU foreign ministers” gathered for a meeting in Luxembourg. “Our thoughts are with all the people of Russia,” she wrote.

Extremists have targeted Russia’s public transporta­tion systems in the past.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? A damaged train carriage at the Technologi­cal Institute metro station in Saint Petersburg on Monday after an explosion rocked the metro system in the Russian city.
AFP PHOTO A damaged train carriage at the Technologi­cal Institute metro station in Saint Petersburg on Monday after an explosion rocked the metro system in the Russian city.

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