Western Mail

AT LEAST 10 DIE IN RUSSIA SUBWAY BLAST

- Irina Titova and Nataliya Vasilyeva in St Petersburg newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ABOMB blast tore through a subway train in St Petersburg, killing 10 people and injuring about 40 as President Vladimir Putin visited the city.

Hours later, police found an unexploded device in one of St Petersburg’s busiest subway stations, sending a wave of anguish and fear through Mr Putin’s home town.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack, but Russian trains and planes have been targeted repeatedly by Islamic militants, mostly connected to the insurgency in Chechnya and other Caucasus republics.

The last confirmed attack was in October 2015 when Islamic State militants downed a Russian airliner heading from an Egyptian resort, killing all 224 people on board.

The December 25 crash of a Russian plane carrying Red Army choir members near the southern city of Sochi is widely believed to have been due to a bomb, but no official cause has been stated for that crash which killed 92 people.

Yesterday’s blast hit the St Petersburg train as it travelled between stations at about 2.20pm local time.

The driver chose to continue on to the next station, Technologi­cal Institute, a decision praised by Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee as aiding evacuation efforts and reducing the danger that passengers would die by trying to walk along the subway’s electrifie­d tracks.

After a few hours of differing casualty tolls, health minister Veronika Skvortsova said 10 people died from the blast.

City health authoritie­s said 43 others were taken to hospital.

Witnesses said the blast spread panic among passengers, who ran towards the exits of the station, which is 40 metres (130ft) undergroun­d.

“Everything was covered in smoke, there were a lot of firefighte­rs,” Maria Smirnova, a student on a train behind the one where the blast went off, told the Dozhd television channel. “Firefighte­rs shouted at us to run for the exit and everyone ran. Everyone was panicking.”

The entire St Petersburg subway system, which serves some two million passengers a day, was shut down and evacuated.

Russia’s National Anti-Terrorist Committee said security was immediatel­y tightened at all of the country’s key transporta­tion sites, and Moscow officials said that included the subway in the Russian capital.

Mr Putin, speaking on television from Constantin­e Palace in the city, said investigat­ors were looking into whether the explosion on the train was a terror attack or if it had some other cause.

He offered his condolence­s to the families of those killed.

Within two hours of the blast, Russian authoritie­s had found and deactivate­d another bomb at a separate busy St Petersburg subway 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 from which most trains to Moscow depart.

Russian law enforcemen­t agencies confirmed the Vosstaniya Square device was rigged with shrapnel and the Interfax news agency said it contained up to 1kg (2.2lbs) of explosives.

Social media users posted photograph­s and video from the Technology Institute subway station showing injured people lying on the floor outside a train with a mangled door.

Frantic commuters were reaching into doors and windows, trying to see if anyone was there, and shouting: “Call an ambulance!”

St Petersburg, Russia’s secondlarg­est city with more than five million residents, is the country’s most popular tourist destinatio­n but there was no immediate informatio­n on whether any foreigners were among the victims.

Russian transport facilities have previously been the target of terror attacks. Suicide bombings in the Moscow subway on March 29 2010 killed 40 people and wounded more than 100 people.

Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov claimed responsibi­lity for the attack by two female suicide bombers, warning Russian leaders that “the war is coming to their cities”.

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 ??  ?? > A subway train hit by a explosion on the in St Petersburg subway system
> A subway train hit by a explosion on the in St Petersburg subway system

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