Daily Mail

Metro massacre

Eleven die in shrapnel storm as suspected suicide bomber detonates device on St Petersburg undergroun­d train

- By Stephen Wright Associate News Editor

A SUICIDE bomber was last night thought to have killed at least 11 people and injured 40 more in a ruthless attack on St Petersburg’s subway.

The blast happened after a device was detonated on a packed train in Russia’s second largest city.

Officials confirmed another unexploded device was later found at a second station nearby and deactivate­d.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the atrocity, which happened while Russian president Vladimir Putin was visiting the city.

But supporters of Islamic State celebrated the attack as revenge for the Syrian air strikes by Russia. Russia has been the target of attacks by Chechen militants in recent years and further attacks have been threatened.

Prime minister Dmitry Medvedev said in a Facebook post that the explosion was a ‘terrorist attack’. Pictures posted

‘There was a deafening bang’

on social media showed the door of a metro train that had been blown out in the blast at about 2.30pm.

Other images showed passengers lying on the ground of a station platform. Children were reported to be among those wounded in the outrage, the latest in a string of attacks on Russia’s public transport system in recent years.

Initial reports suggested two explosions, but it was later confirmed there was a single blast. The explosion happened on a train that was travelling between the Sennaya Ploshchad and Tekhnologi­c hesky Intitut stations, officials said.

Bloodied passengers were left strewn across the platform as emergency services scrambled to save those wounded by the bomb and the resulting shards of glass and twisted metal. Mr Putin was in St Petersburg for talks with the president of Belarus. The Kremlin leader, who visited the scene, said: ‘The causes are not clear, it’s too early.’

Russian media outlets had earlier published a grainy photo which showed an image of a prime

suspect, a middle-aged man who

entered Petrograds­kaya station 20 minutes before the blast. Witnesses had described a man leaving a briefcase on a carriage before moving to another one, just seconds before the huge blast. But last night Russian news agency Interfax said that the original suspect had come forward and denied any involvemen­t. The agency quoted an unidentifi­ed law enforcemen­t official saying that authoritie­s had later identified the suspected suicide attacker as a 23-year-old national of an ex- Soviet Central Asian nation. It did not name the suspect or the country.

A woman who was near the explosion said: ‘People were lying down, all black, scary, with a horrible smell of burned flesh.’ Another woman in the carriage next to the blast described the moment the explosion ripped through the train.

The woman, named only as Polina, said: ‘There was a deafening bang, then a strong smell and smoke. People were pressed against each other. Two women immediatel­y fell unconsciou­s. Everything happened on the move, the train didn’t stop.’

She said that when the train finally pulled into the station, she ‘saw that the neighbouri­ng carriage was mangled, windows were broken, there was no light and there was blood’.

Health minister Veronika Skvortsova said 11 people had died and that around 40 people were hurt. St Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city with more than 5million residents, is the country’s most popular tourist destinatio­n. The Foreign Office currently warns of ‘a high threat from terrorism’ in Russia, and says ‘further attacks are likely’. Russia has a history of attacks on public transport. In 2013, two bomb blasts in two days in the southweste­rn city of Volgograd left more than 30 people dead and 62 needing hospital treatment.

Three years earlier, at least 38 people died in a double suicide bombing on the Moscow metro. And in 2009, a bomb exploded on a high-speed train between Moscow and St Petersburg, killing 27 and injuring another 130.

All the attacks were claimed by Islamist groups.

 ??  ?? Carnage: Onlookers tend to the injured strewn across the platform as others approach mangled train doors at station
Carnage: Onlookers tend to the injured strewn across the platform as others approach mangled train doors at station
 ??  ?? Samaritan: A woman helps a bloodied victim, with others lying nearby
Samaritan: A woman helps a bloodied victim, with others lying nearby
 ??  ?? Horror: Twisted metal protrudes from carriage
Horror: Twisted metal protrudes from carriage
 ??  ?? Quizzed: Suspect denies involvemen­t
Quizzed: Suspect denies involvemen­t

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