The Welland Tribune

Putin orders security agencies to kill terrorists

- NATALIYA VASILYEVA and VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW — The explosion at a supermarke­t in Russia’s secondlarg­est city was a terror attack, President Vladimir Putin said Thursday, adding that he has ordered security agencies to kill terror suspects on the spot if they resist arrest.

Officials said 13 people were injured Wednesday when an improvised explosive device went off at a storage area for customers’ bags at the supermarke­t in St. Petersburg. Investigat­ors said the device contained 200 grams of explosives and was rigged with shrapnel.

While Russian law enforcemen­t agencies stopped short of immediatel­y describing the blast as a terror attack, Putin did not mince words Thursday at a Kremlin awards ceremony for Russian troops who fought in Syria.

“You know that yesterday a terror attack was conducted in St. Petersburg,” Putin said.

He went on to note that another attack was thwarted recently, a reference to an alleged series of bombings in St. Petersburg that a CIA tip helped prevent, according to the Kremlin.

Putin said he told the chief of Russia’s main domestic security agency, the FSB, that agents who encounter resistance from terror suspects should “liquidate bandits on the spot.”

No one has claimed responsibi­lity for the supermarke­t bomb. Eight of the injured remained hospitaliz­ed.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, would not offer any specifics on what led Putin to declare the attack an act of terrorism. The shrapnel that was part of the explosive device proved the explosion “was a terror attack anyway.”

Storage boxes at all Perekresto­k supermarke­ts in St. Petersburg were removed following the attack. Other chains said they would tighten security measures.

Putin said Russia’s two- year military campaign in Syria helped eliminate militants who threatened Russia.

He has previously said that over 4,000 citizens from Russia and some 5,000 people from other ex- Soviet nations have joined the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

“What would have happened if those hundreds, thousands ... had come back to us, trained, armed and well- prepared?” Putin said.

 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An investigat­or on Thursday works inside the supermarke­t after an explosion in St. Petersburg, Russia. At least 13 people were injured in the blast, which President Vladimir Putin calls a terrorist attack.
DMITRI LOVETSKY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An investigat­or on Thursday works inside the supermarke­t after an explosion in St. Petersburg, Russia. At least 13 people were injured in the blast, which President Vladimir Putin calls a terrorist attack.

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