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A
female suicide bomber blew herself up on a city bus in southern Russia
on Monday, killing six people and injuring about 30, officials said.
Suicide Bomber Strikes Russian Bus, Killing 6
A female suicide bomber blew herself up on a city bus in southern Russia
on Monday, killing six people and injuring about 30, officials said.
The attack in Volgograd added to security fears ahead of the Winter
Olympics in Sochi.
The suspected bomber was from the North Caucasus, a region in southern
Russia where an Islamic insurgency has been simmering for more than a
decade following two separatist wars in Chechnya. A local official said
the suspected attacker was married to an Islamic militant.
Volgograd lies 650 kilometers (400 miles) to the northeast of the North
Caucasus, while Sochi sits to the west along the Black Sea.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for Monday's suicide bombing,
but it was the first outside the North Caucasus since Chechen rebel
leader Doku Umarov three months ago called for a resumption of attacks
on civilians and urged militants to target the Sochi Games, which are to
be held in February.
Russia in past years has seen a series of terror attacks on buses,
airplanes and other forms of transportation, some of them carried out by
suicide bombers. The last suicide attack on a bus was in 2008.
Twin bombings on the Moscow subway in March 2010 carried out by female
suicide bombers killed 40 people and wounded more than 120. In January
2011, a male suicide bomber struck Moscow's Domodedovo Airport, killing
37 people and injuring more than 180.
Umarov, who had claimed responsibility for the 2010 and 2011 bombings,
ordered a halt to attacks on civilian targets because of the mass street
protests against President Vladimir Putin in the winter of 2011-12. He
reversed that order in July.
The suspected bomber was from Dagestan, one of the predominantly Muslim
republics in the North Caucasus, said Vladimir Markin, the spokesman for
the Investigative Committee, Russia's main investigative agency.
In a statement, he identified the suspect as 30-year-old Naida
Asiyalova. Russian state television showed pictures of Asiyalova's
passport.
In Dagestan, the center of the insurgency, bombings and shootings occur
almost daily. Most of them target law enforcement officers, not
civilians. The Tsarnaev brothers, accused of carrying out the Boston
Marathon bombings, have roots in Dagestan and Chechnya.
Rasul Temirbekov, a spokesman for the Investigative Committee's branch
in Dagestan, said the suspected bomber was married to an ethnic Russian,
Dmitry Sokolov, whom she had met while both were university students in
Moscow.
She encouraged him to become a rebel, and he quickly gained a reputation
as an expert in explosives, Temirbekov said. Sokolov, whose nom de
guerre is Abdul Jabbar, has been on the run.
Temirbekov said that the suspected suicide bomber had a fatal bone illness.
Video broadcast on state Rossiya television showed that Monday's
explosion occurred as the bus was moving in the far right lane of a
divided six-lane road. The video, taken from a vehicle traveling behind
the bus, showed a burst of flame and gray smoke. Fragments of what
appeared to be window frames and other parts of the bus were left
scattered across the road.
When the bus came to a stop, the video showed many passengers jumping out.
Markin said seven people died, including the suicide bomber, and 33
asked for medical assistance, 28 of whom were hospitalized. Emergency
officials said about 40 people were on the bus.
The local government on Monday placed security forces in the Volgograd region on high alert for 15 days.
———
AP writers Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Arsen Mollayev in Makhachkala contributed to this report.
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