The Star Malaysia

Confusion over college attack

Putin says at least 17 killed in blast, but others say gunman to blame

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MOSCOW: A Russian official said a student attacked a vocational college in Crimea, a rampage that killed at least 17 other students and left more than 40 people wounded, before killing himself.

The comments from Sergei Aksyonov, the regional leader in Crimea, were the latest in a series of shifting explanatio­ns by Russian officials as to what exactly happened at Kerch Polytechni­c College in the Black Sea city of Kerch yesterday.

Russian officials at first reported a gas explosion, and then said an explosive device ripped through the college canteen in a suspected terrorist attack. But witnesses reported that at least some victims were killed in an attack by a gunman or gunmen.

Aksyonov said on television that the student, a local man acting alone, killed himself after the attack.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee, the nation’s top investigat­ive agency, identified the attacker as Vladislav Roslyakov, 18.

It said he was caught on security cameras entering the college with a rifle and firing at students.

The committee said all the victims died of gunshot wounds, contrastin­g with the previous statements by other officials saying they were injured in an explosion.

Reflecting the official confusion, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the victims were killed by an explosion just as the Investigat­ive Committee was announcing they were fatally shot.

Putin deplored the attack as a “tragic event” and offered condolence­s to the victims’ families at a news conference in Sochi, where he had talks with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.

After the attack, local officials declared a state of emergency on the Black Sea peninsula that they had annexed from Ukraine in 2014. They also beefed up security at a new 19km bridge that links the peninsula with Russia that opened earlier this year.

Military units were also deployed around the college.

The Investigat­ive Committee initially said an explosive device that went off at the college’s canteen was rigged with shrapnel.

Sergei Melikov, a deputy chief of the Russian National Guard, said the device was homemade.

Explosives experts inspected the college building for other possible bombs, according to Anti-Terrorism Committee spokesman Andrei Przhezdoms­ky.

Witnesses did not speak of an explosion, but said one or more armed men attacked the school.

The Komsomolsk­aya Pravda newspaper quoted student Semyon Gavrilov as saying he fell asleep during a lecture and woke up to the sound of shooting. He said he looked out and saw a young man with a rifle shooting at people.

“I locked the door, hoping he wouldn’t hear me,” the paper quoted Gavrilov as saying.

He said police arrived 10 minutes later to evacuate people from the college and that he saw dead bodies on the floor and charred walls.

Another student, Yuri Kerpek, told the state RIA Novosti news agency that the shooting went on for about 15 minutes.

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