Yuma Sun

Blast on Russian subway kills 11; 2nd bomb is defused

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QUITO, Ecuador — Supporters of Ecuadorean opposition leader Guillermo Lasso gathered in the streets for a second night Monday to protest what they consider fraud at the ballot box that tilted a presidenti­al runoff in favor of his leftist rival.

Sunday’s razor-thin election win by ruling party candidate Lenin Moreno bucked the trend of rightwing electoral victories in South America following 15 years of leftist domination. Even as calls from Latin American government­s congratula­ting Moreno poured in, Lasso, a conservati­ve banker, vowed to keep up the fight against the installati­on of an “illegitima­te” government.

“We’re not afraid of the miserable cowards who are on the wrong side of history,” he told a crowd of a few thousand supporters outside the National Electoral Council in Quito.

By nightfall, many supporters went home but a few hundred die-hards, some with children in tow, remained in a peaceful vigil. A line of riot police looked on.

The scene was much calmer than the one on election night, when thousands of outraged Lasso supporters shouting “fraud” crashed through metal barricades to almost reach the entrance of the electoral council’s headquarte­rs in Quito. Scuffles also broke out in Guayaquil.

With more than 99 percent of polling places counted, Moreno had 51 percent of the vote while Lasso stood at just under 49 percent.

Key to Lasso’s challenge of the results in all of Ecuador’s 24 provinces were three exit polls that showed him winning. One by pollster Cedatos, which accurately predicted the results of the first round, gave him a victory by six percentage points.

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — A bomb blast tore through a subway train deep under Russia’s second-largest city Monday, killing 11 people and wounding more than 40 in a chaotic scene that left victims sprawled on a smoky platform. Hours later, anguish and fear rose again when police found and defused a shrapnel-packed explosive device at another St. Petersburg station.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack, which came while President Vladimir Putin was visiting the city, his hometown. In the past two decades, Russian trains and planes have been frequent targets of terrorism, usually blamed on Islamic militants.

News reports initially said police were searching for two suspects, and Russian state television showed a photo of one suspect wearing what appeared to be a skullcap characteri­stic of Russia’s Muslim regions. However, the Interfax news agency later cited unspecifie­d sources as saying police now suspect the blast was the work of a suicide bomber linked to radical Islamists.

The National Anti-Terrorism Committee said it was looking for the “perpetrato­rs and organizers of the terror attack.”

St. Petersburg, a major tourist destinatio­n famed for its imperial palaces and lavish art museums, had been spared previous attacks.

“From now on, I will be scared to take the subway,” said Marina Ilyina, 30, who brought flowers to the station where the train stopped after the bombing. “We in St. Petersburg thought we wouldn’t be touched by that.”

The explosion occurred in midafterno­on as the train traveled between stations on one of the city’s north-south lines.

The driver chose to continue on to the next stop, Technologi­cal Institute, a decision praised by the Investigat­ive Committee as aiding evacuation efforts and reducing the danger to passengers who would have had to walk along the electrifie­d tracks.

The National Anti-Terrorism Committee said the death toll was 11, with another 45 people being treated for wounds in hospitals.

Amateur video broadcast by Russian TV showed people lying on the platform of the Technologi­cal Institute station, and others bleeding and weeping just after the damaged train pulled in.

“Everything was covered in smoke. There were a lot of firefighte­rs,” Maria Smirnova, a student on a train behind the stricken one, told independen­t TV station Dozhd.

Within two hours of the blast, authoritie­s had found and deactivate­d another bomb at another busy station, Vosstaniya Square, the anti-terror agency said. That station is a major transfer point for passengers on two lines and serves the railway station to Moscow.

Russian law enforcemen­t agencies confirmed the device was loaded with shrapnel, and the Interfax news agency said it contained up to 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of explosives.

Interfax cited an unidentifi­ed law enforcemen­t official saying that investigat­ors think the suspected suicide bomber left the bomb at the Vosstaniya Square station before blowing himself up on the train.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? RUSSIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE PATROL AN AREA near the Tekhnologi­cheskaya metro station after an explosion in the St. Petersburg subway in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Monday, with fatalities and many injured in the subway train blast.
ASSOCIATED PRESS RUSSIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE PATROL AN AREA near the Tekhnologi­cheskaya metro station after an explosion in the St. Petersburg subway in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Monday, with fatalities and many injured in the subway train blast.

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