Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Russia arrests concert hall gunmen as terror attack death toll rises to 93

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KRASNOGORS­K, (AFP): Russia on Saturday said it had arrested 11 people -- including four gunmen -- over the attack on a Moscow concert hall claimed by Islamic State, as the death toll rose to 93.

Camouflage­d assailants opened fire at the packed Crocus City Hall in Moscow’s northern suburb of Krasnogors­k on Friday evening ahead of a concert by Soviet-era rock band Piknik in the deadliest attack in Russia for at least a decade.

Russia’s FSB security service said some of the perpetrato­rs had fled towards the Russia-Ukraine border, adding that the assailants had “appropriat­e contacts” in the country, according to a statement cited by state-run news agencies.

The Kremlin said the head of the FSB security service had informed President Vladimir Putin about the arrests, while authoritie­s warned the number of fatalities was set to keep rising, with more than 100 still hospitalis­ed.

“FSB Director Alexander Bortnikov reported to the president on the detention of 11 people, including four terrorists involved in the terrorist attack at Crocus City Hall,” it said.

Putin has not made any public remarks or been seen in public in the more than 12 hours since the attack. The Kremlin said he was being kept constantly informed and a government official said he had wished a speedy recovery to the victims.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee, which probes major crimes, said Saturday the number killed was climbing towards 100. “At the moment, it has been establishe­d that 93 people are dead. The death toll is expected to rise,” it said in a statement published on Telegram.

It said people died both from gunshot wounds and from smoke inhalation after a fire engulfed the 6,000-seater venue.

“The terrorists used a flammable liquid to set fire to the concert hall’s premises, where spectators were located, including wounded,” the Investigat­ive Committee said. A fire had quickly spread through the venue on Friday after reports of the mass shooting, with screaming concertgoe­rs rushing to emergency exits.

Some filmed the gunmen from the upper floors as they appeared to methodical­ly walk through the stalls shooting people, footage shared on social media showed.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity on Friday, said its fighters attacked “a large gathering” on Moscow’s outskirts and “retreated to their bases safely”. Russian authoritie­s have called it a “terrorist attack”, but have not commented on Islamic State’s claim.

Some 107 people were still in hospital on Saturday morning, according to Russia’s Emergency Situations Ministry.

Russian Telegram channels, including Baza which is close to the security services, and a lawmaker said some of the suspects were from the central Asian nation of Tajikistan. In a statement, Tajikistan’s foreign affairs ministry said it had not received any informatio­n from Moscow about the involvemen­t of its citizens.

In Moscow, residents formed long queues in the Saturday morning rain to donate blood, according to videos posted by state media outlets.

Memorial posters featuring a single candle replaced advertisin­g billboards at

some Moscow bus stops, the RIA Novosti state agency reported.

Major events were cancelled across the country, including a friendly football match between Russia and Paraguay set to take place in Moscow on Monday.

Statements of condemnati­on from world leaders continued to roll in.

On Saturday, a spokespers­on for Afghanista­n’s foreign ministry said the Taliban “condemns in the strongest terms the recent terrorist attack in Moscow, Russia ... and considers it a blatant violation of all human standards.”

Attention is also being focused on Russia’s powerful intelligen­ce services in the wake of the attack.

Just three days before, Putin had publicly dismissed Western warnings of an imminent attack in Moscow as a propaganda designed to scare Russian citizens.

On 7 March, the US embassy in Russia had issued a security alert saying it was “monitoring reports that extremists have

imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts.”

Washington said it had directly warned Russian authoritie­s about a “planned terrorist attack” possibly targeting “large gatherings” in Moscow. The US had “shared this informatio­n with Russian authoritie­s”, National Security Council spokeswoma­n Adrienne Watson said.

But speaking to FSB chiefs last Tuesday, Putin said: “Recent provocativ­e statements by a number of official Westerns structures about the possibilit­y of terrorist attacks in Russia ... resembles outright blackmail and an intention to intimidate and destabilis­e our society.”

Earlier in March, the FSB said it had killed Islamic State militants who were planning an attack on a Moscow synagogue. Over recent weeks the agency has announced on an almost daily basis the arrest of several pro-Ukrainian saboteurs it said were plotting attacks on Russian military infrastruc­ture.

 ?? ?? Emergency services vehicles are seen outside the burning Crocus City Hall concert hall following the shooting incident in Krasnogors­k. (AFP)
Emergency services vehicles are seen outside the burning Crocus City Hall concert hall following the shooting incident in Krasnogors­k. (AFP)

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