Oman Daily Observer

Russia faces ‘very real’ threat of attack at World Cup

- THIBAULT MARCHAND

Russia says it will take extraordin­ary measures to combat any terrorist threat when it hosts the World Cup next year, as its military campaign in Syria makes the country a prime target for extremists. A bombing on the metro in Saint Petersburg in April that left 15 people dead was among the recent high-profile terror attacks on Russian soil.

The fear of more attacks was heightened after seven people were stabbed in Siberia in August in an attack claimed by the IS group, while the authoritie­s have reported breaking up several extremist cells across the country.

“There is a very real threat of an attack in Russia” during the World Cup, which runs from June 14 to July 15, 2018, said Alexander Golts, an independen­t Russia expert specialisi­ng in security.

Russia has experience­d a number of terror attacks in the last 20 years and during two wars in Chechnya, but the threat has increased since Moscow’s military interventi­on in Syria in September 2015 to support President Bashar al Assad’s regime, making it a priority IS target.

“The authoritie­s say they have succeeded in destroying IS. But several thousand Russians have been taking part in (extremist) conflicts and now they are beginning to return to Russia,” Golts said.

According to the Federal Security Service (FSB), 2,900 Russian extremists, most of them from the Muslim-majority Caucasus republics, have fought in Syria. Between 2,000 and 4,000 more fighters from Central Asia now live in Russia.

Every day, dozens of calls to commit attacks during the tournament from IS propaganda organs are published via social networks. Many of these involve threats against players.

But Pascal Boniface, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal and Strategic Relations in Paris, said these threats are put out “to attract attention”.

There is a risk of terror at “any global sporting event which attracts cameras and those with a desire to make an impact”. Several months before the Winter Olympics in the Black Sea resort of Sochi in 2014, bomb attacks killed 34 people in Volgograd, also in southern Russia, and “we were very worried about attacks” during the event, Boniface said.

FSB director Alexander Bortnikov revealed last month that a number of planned attacks had been thwarted ahead of the World Cup warm-up event the Confederat­ions Cup in June.

In 2016, Russia set up an internatio­nal “working group” charged with overseeing safety at the World Cup and bringing together the security services of 32 countries, despite diplomatic tensions between Moscow and the West, Bortnikov said.

Saint Petersburg police last week began deploying dogs trained to sniff out explosives on the undergroun­d network, while a list of sensitive areas which will be kept under particular­ly close watch — including luxury hotels, training grounds and tourist areas of host cities — was published. Although the authoritie­s remain tight lipped on the details of the World Cup security plan, deputy prime minister Vitaly Mutko has announced at least 30 billion rubles ($512 million) will be spent by Russia in this area.

A decree concerning “strengthen­ed security measures during the Confederat­ions Cup and the World Cup” signed by President Vladimir Putin came into force this June and will be applied again from May 25 to July 25 next year.

The decree includes measures limiting the right to protest and curbing driving in the tournament’s 11 host cities, as well as introducin­g no-fly zones and forbidding entering these cities by bus without a special permit.

Human Rights Watch said it was “impossible not to be concerned” by aspects of the increased safety measures.

“We have already seen the consequenc­es of the presidenti­al decree,” its Russia researcher Yulia Gorbunova said, pointing to the 33 people arbitraril­y detained during the Confederat­ions Cup.

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