Sunday Times

Isis terror rampage claims 143

- By GUY FAULCONBRI­DGE and GLEB STOLYAROV

The four armed men walked calmly towards the metal detectors at Crocus City Hall, firing their automatic weapons pointblank in short bursts at terrified civilians who fell screaming in the hail of bullets.

Nearby, one witness named Natalya had just taken off her coat and was standing in line on Friday evening at the internal entrance to the 6,200-seat concert hall outside Moscow, where Soviet-era rock group Picnic was to perform its hit Afraid Of Nothing.

“The shots came from behind us,” Natalya, who asked for her surname not to be used, said.

She was just about to enter the stalls. “It was loud, like a firecracke­r blast — fireworks, but like an automatic burst. I could hear it right behind me, not far away,” Natalya said. Then Natalya ran for her life.

“Everyone was screaming, and everyone was running,” she said. She ran to the nearby metro station through the cold Moscow night without her coat and escaped.

“I experience­d terrible emotions. It is simply a nightmare.”

Yesterday, Islamic State released a photograph of what it said were the four attackers behind the shooting rampage that killed at least 143 people, the militant group’s Amaq news agency said on Telegram.

“The attack comes within the context of a raging war between the Islamic State and countries fighting Islam,” Amaq added, citing security sources.

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but there were indication­s Russia was pursuing a Ukrainian link, despite emphatic denials from Ukrainian officials that Kyiv had anything to do with the shooting.

Russian authoritie­s said yesterday that they had arrested 11 people, including four suspected gunmen, in connection with the attack.

Journalist­s were able to piece together some of what took place at the concert hall from interviews with witnesses, video footage from the scene, and Russian official accounts and media reports.

More than 143 people were killed and dozens more injured in the deadliest attack in Russia since the 2004 Beslan school siege.

Russia’s Federal Security Service said 11 people — including the four alleged attackers

— had been detained in the Bryansk region, about 340km southwest of Moscow, as they headed for the border, over which they hoped to escape to Ukraine.

The men, clad in camouflage and with combat vests containing dozens of spare magazines, had arrived at Crocus City Hall at about 7.40pm local time in a minivan, leaping out of the back door and heading towards the entrance with their weapons, witnesses said.

They fired directly through the glass doors of the main entrance, shooting at anyone who crossed their path. Dozens of bodies, some in pools of blood, lay motionless on the marble floors and at the main entrance.

Some people smashed through reinforced windows and locked exits with their hands as shots echoed around the 14-year-old hall just 20km west of the Kremlin.

After shooting people at the entrance, the men made their way into the hall itself just as hundreds of people were taking their seats for the sold-out concert.

“Some thought it was a kind of special effect of some sort,” one witness, Anastasia Rodionova, said.

“Then I saw with my own eyes how people were dropping, and the automatic gunfire began.Your instinct for self-preservati­on kicks in. Your eyes widen. Where can I run to? Then someone shouted to us: ‘Get up! Don’t lie down or they will shoot us all right now!’”

Rodionova said some men were able to smash down a door to the street and escaped through it.

Loudspeake­rs began to blare out that the concert was being cancelled for “technical reasons”, and that people were requested to the leave the hall.

Verified video footage showed people rushing for the exits as gunfire repeatedly echoed above screams. The attackers walked through the concert hall aiming and then firing at civilians in controlled bursts.

“They started firing at us. I fell down onto the floor,” one injured woman said from a Moscow hospital bed. She had managed to crawl to the exits.

“A girl next to me was killed.”

Some ran to escape the men, while others cowered behind maroon seats. One woman said she told her friend to lie down behind the seats as the gunfire got louder and louder.

Russian investigat­ors said the men began to set fire to the building. Some witnesses said they poured some sort of liquid on the seating and curtains in several places before setting them alight.

Witnesses told of leaping over fire, some with their clothes melting, to escape the blaze that swiftly spread over an area of 12,900m2, sending flames and a plume of black smoke billowing into the night sky.

“They were shooting. We were in the far corner,” Andrei, one witness, said at the scene. “We went down the fire escape routes to the back.”

The roof collapsed and hundreds of firefighte­rs battled for hours to contain the blaze, which gutted the entire hall. All that was left were the charred iron support beams and the steel frames of hundreds of seats.

The Baza Telegram channel, which is known for its close contacts with Russian special services, said 14 bodies were found on evacuation staircases, while 28 were found in one of the toilets. The bodies of whole families were found, dead mothers embracing their dead children.

 ?? Pictures: Reuters ?? Specialist­s gather near the covered bodies of killed people near the Crocus City Hall concert venue following the shooting incident, outside Moscow, Russia.
Pictures: Reuters Specialist­s gather near the covered bodies of killed people near the Crocus City Hall concert venue following the shooting incident, outside Moscow, Russia.
 ?? ?? Left, Members of Russian special operations forces gather at the burning city hall after the shooting in Moscow.
Left, Members of Russian special operations forces gather at the burning city hall after the shooting in Moscow.
 ?? ?? Above, rescuers work to extinguish fire at the burning Crocus City Hall concert venue.
Above, rescuers work to extinguish fire at the burning Crocus City Hall concert venue.
 ?? ?? Gunmen open fire at terrified civilians.
Gunmen open fire at terrified civilians.

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