Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

6 arrested on terrorism charges in wake of St. Petersburg bombing

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ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — As the residents of Russia’s second-largest city try to regain their nerve in the wake of a subway bombing, officials announced Wednesday that six people have been arrested on suspicion of recruiting others to commit extremist crimes.

Wednesday’s statement from the Investigat­ive Committee gave few details, but said those arrested came from Central Asian countries that once were part of the Soviet Union. Officials have said the suicide attacker behind Monday’s blast in St. Petersburg that killed 13 others was a native of Kyrgyzstan.

The six detained were accused of recruiting “mostly immigrants from the republics of Central Asia to commit crimes of a terrorist nature and involvemen­t in the activities of terrorist organizati­ons banned in Russia,” including the Islamic State group, the statement said.

There was no immediate informatio­n tying those arrested with the suspected bomber, identified as 22-yearold Akbardzhon Dhzalilov. Fifty-five people wounded in the blast remain hospitaliz­ed, deputy mayor Anna Mityanina said Wednesday. The predominan­tly Muslim Central Asian states are seen as a prime recruiting ground for Islamist militants.

Meeting with the heads of security services from a regional alliance that includes most of Russia’s Central Asian neighbors, President Vladimir Putin warned that terrorism remained a threat to all in the region.

“We see that, unfortunat­ely, the situation is not improving,” he said. “The recent tragic events in St. Petersburg are the best confirmati­on of this. We know that each of our countries, practicall­y every one, is a possible and potential target of terrorist attacks.”

Earlier Wednesday, the Investigat­ive Committee said they searched the home of Dhzalilov in St. Petersburg. They also examined CCTV footage from outside Dzhalilov’s home which shows him leave home with a bag and a backpack.

The bomb went off on a train under Russia’s secondlarg­est city Monday. Another bomb, hidden in a bag, was found and de-activated at another St. Petersburg station half an hour before the blast. Dzhalilov’s DNA was found on the bag.

After the attack, several Russian politician­s have called for ending the moratorium on capital punishment. But parliament speaker Vyacheslav Volodin dismissed the statements as attention-getting devices and upbraided the politician­s, saying, “One must not use a tragedy to promote oneself.”

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