The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police: Taxi driver who hit 8 Moscow pedestrian­s fell asleep

- By Angela Charlton

MOSCOW — The suspect in a taxi crash near Red Square that injured two Mexican soccer fans and six other pedestrian­s as Russia hosts the World Cup told interrogat­ors he fell asleep at the wheel, Moscow city police said Sunday.

The police released a video of an interrogat­ion session with a man the Moscow force identified as the taxi driver. In the recording, he says he briefly dozed off and accidental­ly hit the gas. It was unclear whether the man spoke under duress.

The man in the video says he hadn’t slept in 20 hours and wasn’t drunk, and ran away after the accident because he was afraid that angry bystanders would kill him. He was later detained.

The Moscow city traffic authority identified the driver as 28-year-old Chyngyz Anarbek, who is from Kyrgyzstan.

Speaking to The Associated Press from the town of Muras Ordo in Kyrgyzstan, Anarbek’s older brother said only had been working as a taxi driver for a month. He said his sibling was in “stress, shock, horror” after what happened.

“Let people say what they want, but my brother is clean, not guilty. He was never and could never be a terrorist,” Almazbek Anarbek said.

The younger Anarbek won a bronze medal last year in the world championsh­ip of Pankration, an ancient sport combining skills of boxing and wrestling

Videos circulatin­g on Russian social media and some news websites after the incident showed the taxi veering onto the sidewalk Saturday and striking pedestrian­s. The accident took place on Ilinka Street, about 650 feet from Red Square and Moscow’s famous GUM shopping arcade, an area popular with tourists.

Viktoria Geranovich, who works nearby and filmed the fleeing driver on her phone, described her shock.

“I called the ambulance right away,” she told The Associated Press. “I was trembling. It is not a thing you see every day, when a taxi drives right into the crowd.”

Moscow police would not comment on whether the crash would affect security measures for soccer’s World Cup, which is being held in 11 Russian cities over the next month. Among the security concerns has been the possible use of vehicles as weapons.

Russia has also been working with law enforcemen­t from other countries to secure the tournament.

“The sense we are getting is that (the taxi crash) is not football-related,” Mark Roberts, head of U.K. soccer policing, told the AP. “At the moment, everything we are being told is that it was just a run-of-the-mill event.”

A spokeswoma­n for FIFA told The Associated Press that World Cup organizers regretted what happened, but referred security questions to Moscow authoritie­s because the crash took place outside stadiums or fan venues.

 ?? MOSCOW TRAFFIC CONTROL CENTER PRESS SERVICE ?? Ambulance and police work at the site of a crash near Red Square in Moscow on Saturday. Police said at least eight people were injured when a taxi crashed into pedestrian­s. The driver said he had fallen asleep at the wheel and ran from the scene...
MOSCOW TRAFFIC CONTROL CENTER PRESS SERVICE Ambulance and police work at the site of a crash near Red Square in Moscow on Saturday. Police said at least eight people were injured when a taxi crashed into pedestrian­s. The driver said he had fallen asleep at the wheel and ran from the scene...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States