The Jerusalem Post

Russia detains 6 on terrorism suspicion

ISIS literature found during search, no proof linking them to attack on metro station

- • By POLINA NIKOLSKAYA

ST. PETERSBURG (Reuters) – Six people of Central Asian origin have been detained on suspicion of recruiting for radical Islamist groups, Russian investigat­ors said on Wednesday. But there was no proof linking the detainees to the deadly metro bombing in St. Petersburg, they added.

Russian state investigat­ors say their main suspect in Monday’s bombing, which killed 14 people and wounded 50, is Akbarzhon Jalilov, who was born in 1995 in Kyrgyzstan, a Muslim majority state in Central Asia. He was killed in the blast.

Russia’s state investigat­ive committee said the detainees had been charged with aiding terrorist activity. Since November 2015, they had engaged in recruiting other Central Asian migrants for Islamic State and for another banned Islamist movement, the Nusra Front, its statement said.

Extremist Islamist literature was found during a search of the detainees’ living quarters, the statement added.

The committee added, however: “At present there is no evidence that the detainees were in any way connected with, or knew, the perpetrato­r of the terrorist attack in the St. Petersburg metro.”

There are hundreds of thousands of central Asian emigrés living and working in Russia. They provide, according to many security experts, a fertile recruiting ground for radical Islamist movements.

Jalilov’s parents, who say they had not seen their son for a while, were due to fly into St. Petersburg on Wednesday and a Reuters witness at Pulkovo airport reported heavy security.

A middle-aged man and woman were escorted away after the flight arrived, the Reuters reporter said. Authoritie­s refused to confirm that the couple were Jalilov’s parents, but the woman, in response to a Russian TV reporter’s question, said she did not believe her son was the bomber.

Meanwhile, authoritie­s have beefed up security across major cities, with sniffer dogs and bag checks across several metro stations in Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin touched on the attack at a previously scheduled meeting in Moscow with security service chiefs from ex-Soviet countries.

“We see that, unfortunat­ely, the situation is not getting better and the clearest confirmati­on of that is the recent tragic incident in St Petersburg,” Putin said.

“People died as a result of a terrorist act, many were hurt,” he said

 ?? (Anton Vaganov/Reuters) ?? RELATIVES OF VICTIMS of Monday’s metro bombing attend a memorial service in St. Petersburg yesterday
(Anton Vaganov/Reuters) RELATIVES OF VICTIMS of Monday’s metro bombing attend a memorial service in St. Petersburg yesterday

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