Tuesday, April 4, 2017

ST PETERSBURG METRO ATTACK

Russian citizen of Kyrgyz origin ‘possibly behind’ St. Petersburg bombin



04.04.2017 15:05:05 - ST PETERSBURG METRO ATTACK: Russian citizen of Kyrgyz origin ‘possibly behind’ St. Petersburg bombing – Kyrgyz security official 

(live-PR.com) - Posted on April 4, 2017
Russian citizen of Kyrgyz origin ‘possibly behind’ St. Petersburg bombing – Kyrgyz security official
President Putin lays flowers for the victims of the St Petersburg metro terror attack.

St Petersburg metro blast, with more reports in media, Russian Investigative Committee has identified 22-year-old Akbarzhon Dzhalilov, a Kyrgyz-born Russian citizen, as the suspect believed to have carried
out the terrorist bombing in the Saint Petersburg Metro.

“Investigative Committee experts, working alongside FSB and the Interior Ministry rapid response teams, have established that the explosive device could have been set off by a male suspect whose fragmented remains have been found inside the third car,” Svetlana Petrenko, the committee’s spokeswoman, told Interfax.

She stressed that, while his identity is known, details will not be disclosed at this time “given the ongoing investigation.”

The official noted that the authorities are “carrying on with interrogations and inspecting CCTV cameras.”

“A blast assessment study, as well as a genetic examination, will follow,” she said.

The statement comes as the death toll continues to rise. Earlier on Tuesday, Russian Health Minister Veronika Skvortsova said three more blast victims had succumbed to their injuries, increasing the number of fatalities from eleven to fourteen.

Kyrgyzstan’s State Committee for National Security (GKNB) said that “a person of Kyrgyz origin, [who] is now a Russian citizen, is the possible perpetrator of the attack.”

Russia has neither confirmed nor denied that report, and has not linked GKNB’s statement to the suspect identified as the suicide attacker.

The bombing in Saint Petersburg was discussed at a meeting between Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and his Kyrgyz counterpart, Erlan Abdyldaev.

Speaking after the talks, Lavrov said “terrorism is a crime against all humankind and all religions.” He also stressed the need to step up the fight against terrorism, “instead of utilizing certain kinds of terrorists to pursue selfish goals.”

“It is for certain, that we must intensify [counter-terrorism] activities, given the situation that is developing in many parts of the world,” Abdyldaev echoed, while lauding the close intelligence ties between Russia and post-Soviet countries.reports RT news

Russian police suspect that the explosion on a St Petersburg subway train was caused by 23-year man Central Asia origin suicide bomber.

St Petersburg metro explosion that killed up to 10 people as a “terrorist attack” is under investigation . St petersberg metro station is hit by bomb blast at Metro station explosion has killed ten person and entire Metro station closed. Putin said security persons are investigating to find the details. Many countries expressed shock condolence.On Sunday anti govt protests were curbed by police and youths in Russia are restless due to rampant corruption . Matter is under scanner who are behind this bomb explosion. Reports of fifty wounded and another device defused, Is it by ISIS or any rebel still matter hybrid .

A suicide bomber from Kyrgyzstan was behind the explosion that killed 11 people and injured dozens more in the Saint Petersburg metro, security services in the Central Asian country said Tuesday.

“The suicide bomber in the Saint Petersburg metro was a Kyrgyz national Akbarjon Djalilov… born in 1995,” a spokesman for the country´s security services told AFP.

“It is probable that he acquired Russian nationality,” he said.

Russia´s Investigative Committee said it was probing an “act of terror” over the blast that rocked the metro in the country´s second city on Monday afternoon, but added it would look into all other possible causes of the blast.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the explosion, which comes after the Daesh group called for attacks on Russia in retribution for its military intervention in Syria against the jihadists.

At least 7,000 nationals from former Soviet countries, including 2,900 Russians, have joined jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria, mostly Daesh, according to Russia´s FSB intelligence service.
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