The Jerusalem Post

Taxi plows into Moscow crowd including World Cup fans, injuring eight

Officials cite driver as saying it wasn’t deliberate

- • By JACK STUBBS, GABRIELLE TÉTRAULT-FARBER and MARIA KISELYOVA

MOSCOW (Reuters) – A taxi drove into a crowd of pedestrian­s near Moscow’s Red Square on Saturday, injuring eight people including two Mexicans in the city for the World Cup, officials and eyewitness­es said.

The incident took place as residents and visiting soccer fans thronged the center of Moscow on a balmy summer evening, a short distance from the Kremlin.

Moscow’s traffic management authority said the taxi driver had a driver’s license issued in Kyrgyzstan, a mainly Muslim ex-Soviet republic. It cited the driver, who was in police custody, as saying he had not driven into the crowd on purpose.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said in a post on Twitter: “There was an unpleasant incident with a taxi. The driver lost control of the vehicle.”

The city’s police said they had opened a criminal investigat­ion into a suspected violation of the traffic code.

Eight people were hurt and had been taken to hospital, Moscow city’s healthcare department said. It said seven were in a satisfacto­ry condition, while one woman was seriously hurt.

The Mexican Embassy in Moscow said two Mexican women had been lightly injured. Also among those hurt were a Ukrainian and two Russian citizens, Russia’s TASS news agency quoted a source in the emergency services as saying.

Video of the incident posted on social media showed the yellow Hyundai taxi pull sharply out of a line of stationery traffic, accelerate and mount the narrow pavement,

which was packed with pedestrian­s.

The vehicle drove for about 10 meters along the pavement, bowling over pedestrian­s, with some of them being carried along on the hood of the car.

The taxi came to a halt after hitting a traffic sign. As bystanders tried to pull open the driver’s side door, the driver, dressed in black trousers and black T-shirt, jumped out and sprinted away.

More bystanders chased after him and could be seen trying to tackle him to the ground as the footage ended.

A witness told Reuters that some of the people hit were wearing Mexican team colors. Mexico take on Germany on Sunday in their first World Cup match at Moscow’s Luzhniki stadium, and thousands of Mexican fans are in the Russian capital.

A second witness at the scene told Reuters about the driver of the taxi: “He was pulled out of the vehicle, he ran off but bystanders apprehende­d him. He was shouting: ‘It wasn’t me’.”

Another witness, Viktoria Geraimovic­h, said she called the emergency services on her mobile phone.

Describing the actions of the driver, she said: “He ran into a group of Mexicans. There were shouts, moans. He was only stopped because he hit a traffic sign.”

“Someone gave him a punch in the face. He stayed in the car, people came up to him, said what are you doing, punched him in the face, he opened the door and tried to run away.”

“It’s scary that it was in the center [of Moscow] and I was right opposite,” she said.

Moscow’s traffic management authority said the driver was not drunk and Interfax news agency cited a source saying there was no alcohol in his blood.

The same source told Interfax the driver had said he fell asleep at the wheel and accidental­ly pressed the accelerato­r pedal.

Russian authoritie­s have vowed to host a safe World Cup, which Russia is hosting for the first time ever. It is taking place in 11 cities until July 15.

In central Moscow, authoritie­s have installed heavy concrete blocks across the entrances to pedestrian­ized areas following a spate of incidents in European cities in which vehicles were used to mow down people.

The US State Department on Friday updated its travel advice on Russia, saying terrorist groups were plotting attacks.

“Terrorists may attack with little or no warning, targeting tourist locations, transporta­tion hubs, markets/shopping malls, and local government facilities,” the travel advice stated.

The Moscow traffic authority posted on Twitter a copy of what it said was the taxi driver’s license. It gave his name as Chingiz Anarbek Uulu and said he was born on April 22, 1990.

It gave his birthplace as the town of Kochkor-Ata in Kyrgyzstan, near the border with Uzbekistan.

An account on Russian social media platform Odnoklassn­iki for someone with the same name and date of birth was last updated two years ago.

The last video he posted on his page depicted chapter 82 of the Koran, which discussed judgment day. There was nothing on the page to suggest any links to, or sympathies with, Islamists groups.

People walking around in central Moscow on Saturday evening said they were aware of the taxi incident, but it did not put them off spending time in the city. The streets were packed with people listening to street musicians perform, or sitting at pavement cafes.

“We’re not scared but disappoint­ed,” said Youseff Fraige, 27, from Monterrey, Mexico.

“We didn’t expect something like this to happen in a place like this. It could happen anywhere in the world, but that it happens here in Moscow, in the middle of the World Cup, it’s shocking for us.” •

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PEOPLE GATHER around the damaged taxi in central Moscow yesterday.
(Reuters) PEOPLE GATHER around the damaged taxi in central Moscow yesterday.

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