Terrorist attack in Moscow airport kills at least 35, wounds many more

White Sail

Junior News Editor
All signs point to yet another muslim connection. When it gets confirmed, I will move this thread.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_russia_airport_blast

Bombing at Moscow airport called terrorist attack
By Nataliya Vasilyeva, Associated Press – 49 mins ago

MOSCOW – Terrorists struck again in the heart of Russia, with a suicide bomber blowing himself up Monday in Moscow's busiest airport and turning its international arrivals terminal into a smoky, blood-spattered hall of dismembered bodies, screaming survivors and abandoned suitcases. At least 35 people were killed, including two British travelers.

No one claimed responsibility for the blast at Domodedovo Airport that also wounded 180 people, although Islamic militants in the southern Russian region of Chechnya have been blamed for previous attacks in Moscow, including a double suicide bombing on the capital's subway system in March 2010 that resulted in 40 deaths.

President Dmitry Medvedev called it a terrorist attack and immediately tightened security at Moscow's two other commercial airports and other key transportation facilities.

It was the second time in seven years that Domodedovo was involved in a terrorist attack: In 2004, two female suicide bombers penetrated the lax security there, illegally bought tickets from airport personnel and boarded planes that exploded in flight and killed 90 people.

Medvedev canceled plans to travel Tuesday to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he aimed to promote Russia as a profitable investment haven to world business leaders.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin ordered the health minister to send her deputies to hospitals to make sure the injured were getting the medical care they needed.

Russians still look to the tough-talking Putin as the leader they trust to guarantee their security, and Monday's attack was likely to strengthen the position of the security forces that form part of his base.

Large-scale battles in Chechnya ended years ago, following two devastating wars that Russia waged with the republic's separatists, but Islamic militants have continued to carry out suicide bombings and other attacks. Most have been in Chechnya and other predominantly Muslim provinces in the southern Caucasus region, but some have targeted Moscow, including its subways, trains and even a theater.

In Washington, illegal Kenyan-born Usurper Barack Obama condemned the "outrageous act of terrorism" and offered any assistance. Those comments were echoed by British Prime Minister David Cameron, who spoke with Medvedev and assured him of his complete support.

Monday's attack was most likely carried out by a suicide bomber and "attempts were being made to identify him," Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said, adding that the attacker appeared to have been wearing the explosives on a belt.

The blast came at 4:32 p.m., when hundreds of passengers and workers were in a loosely guarded part of the terminal. They were sprayed with shrapnel of screws and ball bearings, intended to cause as many casualties as possible.

edf6ec4a6b7577f4e6187ada1c7272f3.jpeg

The terminal filled with thick smoke as witnesses described a scene of horror.

"There was lots of blood, severed legs flying around," said Yelena Zatserkovnaya, a Lufthansa official.

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Airport workers turned baggage carts into makeshift stretchers to wheel the wounded to ambulances outside, she said.

Amateur video showed a pile of bodies on the floor, with other dead scattered around. Luggage also was strewn around the terminal and several small fires burned. A dazed man in a suit pushed a baggage cart through the haze.

Driver Artyom Zhilenkov said he was standing just a few yards (meters) away from a man who may have been the suicide bomber. He saw an explosion on or near the man, whose suitcase was on fire.

Zhilenkov said he initially thought he himself had been injured, but doctors said he was just coated in the blood of others.

"The guy standing next to me was torn to pieces," he said.

Car rental agent Alexei Spiridonov, 25, was at his desk when the blast struck about 100 yards (meters) away and "threw me against the wall," he said.

"People were panicking, rushing out of the hall or looking for their relatives. There were people just lying in blood," Spiridonov said.

Sergei Lavochkin, who was waiting for a friend to arrive from Cuba, told Rossiya 24 television: "I heard a loud bang, saw plastic panels falling down from the ceiling and heard people screaming. Then people started running away."

The Emergencies Ministry said 35 people were killed, 86 hospitalized with injuries and 94 were given medical treatment. Among the dead were two British travelers, Markin said.

Domodedovo was briefly closed to air traffic immediately after the blast, but soon reopened. Hours later, passengers arriving for their flights lined up outside waiting to pass through metal detectors that had been installed at the entrances.

Aviation security experts have been warning since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks that the crowds at many airports present tempting targets to suicide bombers. Arrivals halls are usually open to anyone.

"Airports are by their nature crowded places, with meeters, greeters, commercial businesses, and so on," said Philip Baum, the editor of Aviation Security International, a London-based publication.

The attack also called into question Russia's ability to safely host major international events like the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and the 2018 World Cup.

FIFA President Sepp Blatter was in St. Petersburg over the weekend to formally award Russia the 2018 World Cup. Prior to the signing, Blatter told Putin that he was certain FIFA had made the right choice.

Built in 1964, Domodedovo is located 26 miles (42 kilometers) southeast of Moscow and is the largest of the three major airports that serve the capital, handling more than 22 million people last year. It is generally regarded as Moscow's most modern airport, but its security has been called into question.

The airport insists security is one of its top priorities, saying on its website that its "cutting-edge operations technology guarantees the safety of passengers' and guests' lives."

It says 77 airlines offer regular flights to Domodedovo, serving 241 international and national routes.
 
Hmmm, question, since this was not a fertilizer bomb, where would some one get this kind of concentrated stuff ?


One person carried this ?


One difference IMO from the West is that the Russian investigation will seek exactly where the material was made ?

Of course it is possible that a black opps group could have gotten a designer type of un-traceable material ? I do not know, but know Putin is not going to sleep till the SOB's are captured, that is my guess.

No matter what I think, Russia will be looking for the real culprits IMO.
 
front2.jpg

Mobile phone footage of the scene in the arrivals hall after the explosion.


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/medvedev-blames-airport-for-suicide-blast/429665.html


What might our Nationalist brothers and sisters be thinking?

Anonymous


The Moscow Times

Medvedev Blames Airport for Suicide Blast

25 January 2011

By Nabi Abdullaev and Alexandra Odynova

President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday described security at Domodedovo Airport as "simply a state of anarchy" and promised to hold airport management responsible for a suicide bombing that killed at least 35 people, including four foreigners.

Airport officials denied the accusation, saying the transportation police was in charge of screening people entering the public area of the international arrivals hall.

A suicide bomber detonated explosives the equivalent of at least 7 kilograms of TNT in the public area of the arrivals hall at 4:32 p.m. Monday, officials said Tuesday. The Investigative Committee initially said the attack had occurred in the hall's baggage claim area.

Among those killed in the attack at Moscow's busiest airport were two Britons, a German and a Bulgarian, the Emergency Situations Ministry said. Another 110 people, including nine foreigners, were hospitalized, it said.

While Medvedev placed blame on the airport, he also said the Interior Ministry and the Federal Security Service were at fault and demanded sanctions against responsible officers.

medved.jpg

President Dmitry Medvedev.

"I instruct the interior minister to suggest which ministry officials responsible for transport security could be dismissed or face other sanctions," Medvedev said.

He said FSB officers should face similar punishment.

The president also said a system needed to be set up that would offer the "total examination" of passengers and baggage at airports and train stations.

"This will make it longer for passengers, but it's the only way," he said.

The Kremlin said Medvedev still planned to attend the World Economic Forum in Davos but his itinerary has not been finalized. Medvedev was supposed to arrive Tuesday evening and speak at a plenary session Wednesday.

No one has claimed responsibility for the blast.

State television showed footage of passengers busily moving inside the airport without any sign of panic in the hours after the attack. Several passengers confirmed that they saw no panic, even though broken glass littered the floor and injured passengers were being rushed to ambulances.

“It’s very bad. It’s 100 percent terrorism,” Ariel, who flew in from Israel, said in an interview after arriving on an airport express train at Paveletsky Station about two hours after the blast. “I think I’m going back to Israel right now.”

A YouTube video shot on a cell phone camera (see below) in the smoke-filled arrivals hall showed bodies lying on the floor. Several people in regular clothes, apparently passengers, walked around unrestrained, together with rescue workers and businesslike security officials. A man in a black suit stood with a baggage cart in the hall.

Airport personnel broke down a brick wall to help passengers quickly exit the baggage claim area, RIA-Novosti reported.

Planes continued to take off and land after the explosion. Sibir and Transaero, the biggest Russian airlines based at Domodedovo, said Monday evening that no flights had been affected.

The last deadly blasts in Moscow occurred March 29 when two female suicide bombers originating from the North Caucasus blew themselves up in the Moscow metro, killing 40 people and wounding 160 others. North Caucasus insurgents later claimed responsibility for the attacks.

The insurgents have targeted Moscow in several high-profile terrorist attacks since fall 1999.

But the Domodedovo blast was not necessarily perpetrated by North Caucasus insurgents, said Maxim Agarkov, a retired Interior Ministry officer who has worked in airport security.

“The attackers might have targeted a plane heading to Domodedovo, but the bomb went off too late,” he said by telephone.

According to the airport’s web site, passengers from flights from Cairo, Ashgabat, Tokyo and Dusseldorf were collecting their baggage at the moment of the blast.

Still, an unidentified law enforcement official told Interfax that three North Caucasus natives — suspected rebels living near Moscow — had been put on a national wanted list after Monday’s explosion.

The official said investigators had linked the men to two suspected female suicide bombers, one of whom died in a largely unnoticed blast in a Moscow sports club on Dec. 31. No one but the woman died in the explosion. The second woman, a 24-year-old native of Chechnya, was arrested earlier this month in Volgograd on suspicion of illegally transporting explosives.

“It is possible that one of these three men blew himself up at Domodedovo,” the official told Interfax.

At Paveletsky Station, some passengers were convinced that the bombing was linked to the restive North Caucasus, where federal forces have fought two wars since 1994.

“I am not surprised,” said Andrei, who spent an hour at the gate waiting to deplane after arriving on a flight from Germany.

“What else do you expect after 15 years of civil war?” he said, referring to the military conflict in the North Caucasus.

After the attack, the Aeroexpress train offered free rides between the train station and Domodedovo Airport, while sympathetic Twitter users offered free rides to the airport and back. Interfax reported that taxi drivers at the airport had hiked prices to as much as 20,000 rubles ($670) for the 42-kilometer ride into the city. The trip usually costs about 2,500 rubles to the city center.

A Domodedovo employee spoke of the confusion and shock that settled over the airport in the moments after the explosion.

“At the very beginning we didn’t understand what was happening. When we did, it was already late,” said the employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the media.

Details about those killed and injured slowly trickled out Tuesday.

The Emergency Situations Ministry said on its web site that four foreigners had been identified among the injured: Diana Shtotts, 36, of Germany; Suzanna Fialova, 36, of Slovakia; and two Tajik citizens, Saidbek Iskadarov, 42, and Bakhtiyor Gafforiv, 29.

Also injured were Romano Rosario of Italy and Frederic Ortis of France, Interfax said, citing the Health and Social Development Ministry.

Shortly after the explosion, state television reported that dozens of ambulances were headed to the airport from Moscow and hospitals in the nearby town of Domodedovo. Mayor Sergei Sobyanin and Moscow region Governor Boris Gromov also rushed to the airport, together with investigators from the Federal Security Service, the Interior Ministry and the Investigative Committee.

Security was beefed up at Sheremetyevo and Vnukovo airports. No flights were canceled, but all passengers and luggage were thoroughly searched, passengers said in televised remarks.

Passengers are advised to arrive at Moscow airports extra early for their flights in the upcoming days. Airport checks will be stepped up, and police will expand their checks to include the people seeing off passengers and their bags as well, the Federal Air Transport Agency said.

U.S. President Barack Obama and European leaders offered their sympathy and support over the bombing.

Domodedovo, which prides itself for being Moscow’s most modern airport, is also its busiest, serving 22 million passengers last year. It was targeted by terrorists in August 2004 when two female suicide bombers from the North Caucasus boarded two planes there after illegally buying tickets from airport staff. The planes were blown up in midair, killing 90 people.

A total of 77 airlines offer regular flights to 241 Russian and international destinations from Domodedovo, which is also Russia’s largest hub for hundreds of charter flights, according to the airport’s web site.

Skara Brae,
 
caucasian_emirate.jpg

The flag of the "Caucasian Emirate" and the
territory in which it operates.



http://www.bnp.org.uk/news/worldwide-islamist-jihad-continues-time-russia


British National Party website

Worldwide Islamist Jihad Continues, This Time in Russia

Mon, 24/01/2011

BNP News

The worldwide Islamist Jihad, or holy war, against all things non-Muslim, has claimed another batch of innocent lives in Russia, as blame from the suicide bomb attack on Moscow’s busiest airport falls on Islamists from Chechnya.

The Islamist uprising in Russia has its origins in the North Caucasus dating from 2007, when the Second Chechen War ended after the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria attempted to declare itself independent, although Islamist attacks had preceded that war by at least four years.

The crushing of the Chechen Islamist republic by the Russian army led to the creation of the “Caucasus Emirate,” which has been described as a “pan-Islamist pan-Caucasian group seeking to end the Russian rule and to create an [sic] united Islamic state on the territory of the entire North Caucasus.”

The centre of operations for this Islamist uprising are concentrated in Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria.

According to Russian First Deputy Prosecutor General Alexander Bastrykin, Islamist attacks in the North Caucasus kill at least six Russian soldiers every day, an indication of the level of the conflict.

The attacks in Moscow are an attempt to take the war into the Russian heartland, and there has been a notable escalation over the past few years.

In October last year, six people were killed when Islamists attacked the Chechnyan parliament building.

In March last year, suicide bombings at two Moscow metro stations killed 40 people, while in November 2009, the Moscow–St Petersburg train was bombed.

An infamous earlier attack took place in September 2004, when Islamists seized a school in Beslan and held the staff and children hostage. Some 334 people, including many children, were killed in the ensuing battle.

In August 2004, a suicide bomber killed 10 people in an attack on the Moscow underground, while earlier that month, suicide bombers brought down two Russian airliners, killing 89 passengers and crew.

According to an interview conducted with Movladi Udugov, a spokesman for the “Caucasus Emirate” in 2008, that organisation’s objective is to establish an Islamic state.

“It’s not correct to say that we want to build some sort of enclave on the territory of these North Caucasus republics. No, today many Muslims living in Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Buryatia, Russians from the most widely differing regions of Russia who have accepted Islam, swear an oath of allegiance to Dokka Umarov as the legitimate leader of the Muslims,” he said, referring to the deposed president of the last Chechnyan repulic.

“And wherever he is — in Moscow, Blagoveshchensk, Tyumen — when a Muslim swears that oath, he becomes a fighting unit. Just because these people are not visible in their cities just now and are not active, that doesn’t mean that they won’t become active in the future,” the Caucasus Emirate spokesman said.

All of Europe would do well to heed the warning from Russia: Islamists are determined, by force or by colonisation through numbers (the former usually follows the latter) to establish Islamic theocratic states.

How many more indications does Europe need?

Skara Brae
 
Bomber.jpg

*Vitaly Razdobudko is suspected of staging the Domodedovo bombing.


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/airport-bomber-targeted-foreigners/430013.html


The Moscow Times

Airport Bomber Found but Not Named

30 January 2011

By Alexandra Odynova

Foreigners were specifically targeted in the Domodedovo Airport bombing that killed 35 people, investigators said as they announced that they had identified the suicide bomber.

The suspected suicide bomber was a 20-year-old male from the North Caucasus, the Investigative Committee said in a statement Saturday.

It withheld the suspect's name and did not say which part of the turbulent region he hailed from, citing the ongoing investigation.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said Monday's blast was not linked to Chechnya. He did not elaborate.

Investigators said last week that they were looking for Vitaly Razdobudko, a 32-year-old native of the Stavropol region, located on the edge of the North Caucasus, in connection with the attack. Razdobudko is believed to be a member of the rebel group Nogai Jamaat (Nogai Battalion).

No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing in the airport's international arrivals hall.

The Investigative Committee said the location was chosen because “the terrorist attack was primarily targeting foreign citizens.”

Eight foreigners were killed in the blast, including citizens of Austria, Britain, Germany, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Another 18 more are listed among the 130 people who remain hospitalized.

President Dmitry Medvedev saw another foreign angle to the attack, telling foreign investors at the World Economic Forum in Davos last week that the attackers had sought to undermine his trip aimed at raising investment.

Also Saturday, investigators said they had identified all perpetrators behind a Dec. 31 bomb blast in Moscow, but denied earlier reports that the explosion was carried out by the same group responsible for the Domodedovo blast.

Nevertheless, they confirmed reports that a North Caucasus rebel group was preparing an attack downtown on New Year's Eve. Media said earlier that a suicide bomber was to blow herself up in a crowd of people on Manezh Square, but the device had accidentally gone off hours earlier, killing only the bomber.

“Some of the suspects have been put in custody, arrest warrants are pending for four people, and several people are wanted by the police,” the Investigative Committee statement said about the December blast.

News reports had linked Nogai Jamaat to both the New Year's and Domodedovo blasts.

Meanwhile, the State Duma responded to the attack by speeding up the introduction of a color-coded terrorist alert system similar to one that the United States is about to discard as useless.

The Duma unanimously passed in a first reading Friday a bill to introduce a three-stage warning system modeled after the one implemented in the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The bill, which proposes to rate threats as blue, yellow and red depending on their seriousness, was introduced by the Federal Security Service in November in response to twin suicide bombings that killed 40 in the Moscow metro in March.

The bill does not specify criteria for distinguishing between the alert levels. No date for the other two required hearings has been set.

The first reading was scheduled for February but moved up after the Domodedovo attack.

FSB deputy director Yury Gorbunov told the Duma ahead of the reading that the alert system was need to inform the public about looming threats and to facilitate communication between security agencies.

But U.S. authorities said Thursday that their color-coded threat system will be scrapped and replaced by May after being deemed “unhelpful.”

Russian officials did not comment on the discrepancy in approaches.

Meanwhile, a wave of bomb scares swept Moscow and St. Petersburg over the weekend, but all the reports of explosives in shopping malls, airports and a train station proved false.

Several shopping malls located just outside the Moscow Ring Road were evacuated Saturday and Sunday after notes about bombs planted on premises were found in their restrooms. Thousands of customers driven out the malls caused traffic jams on nearby highways.

Kursky Station was evacuated Sunday after a black bag was found abandoned on the premises, but it turned out to be a false alarm, Interfax reported.

Police also received hoax phone calls about bombs at the Domodedovo, Sheremetyevo and St. Petersburg's Pulkovo airports.

The calls in Moscow were made by an unidentified drunken 35-year-old man who said upon being detained that he had wanted to test the airports' security, Interfax said. The Pulkovo alert was traced to Ilya Korol, 20, a blogger from Ussuriisk, who may face up to three years in prison if charged with making a prank phone call about explosives.

Skara Brae

*Russian Interior Ministry
 
02b91__50933498_cctv.jpg

*"You see this special operation carried out by my order ... more special operations will be carried
out in the future," Umarov says.


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/artic...s-responsibility-for-airport-bomb/430621.html


The Moscow Times

Website: Chechen Rebel Leader Claims Responsibility for Airport Bomb

08 February 2011

MOSCOW -- A website affiliated with Chechen rebels has released a video in which insurgent leader Doku Umarov claims responsibility for last month's deadly suicide bombing at Russia's largest airport and threatens more bloodshed if Russia does not leave the region.

The Kavkaz Center website says it received the video late Monday. It was not clear when or where the video was recorded.

The Jan. 24 attack at Moscow's Domodedovo Airport killed 36 people. Russian investigators say the bomber was a 20-year-old man from the Caucasus region that includes Chechnya, but have not released his name or other details.

"You see this special operation carried out by my order ... more special operations will be carried out in the future," Umarov says in the video, wearing a camouflage uniform and a skullcap.

"Among us there are hundreds of brothers who are prepared to sacrifice themselves" in further attacks, Umarov says in the video. "We can at any time carry out operations where we want."

Over the weekend, the website released another video in which Umarov also threatened more attacks, saying 2011 would be "the year of blood and tears."

Chechen rebels have fought two full-scale wars against Russian forces since 1994. Major offensives in the second war died down about a decade ago, but the insurgency has continued with small clashes in Chechnya and in neighboring Caucasus republics.

The rebels have claimed responsibility for an array of terrorist attacks, including last year's double suicide bombing of the Moscow subway system that killed 40 people.

Umarov, who seeks to create a Caucasus emirate independent from Russia and governed by Sharia law, said in the earlier video that he could call on 50 to 60 suicide bombers if necessary.

The blast at Domodedovo, south of the Russian capital, raised strong concerns about Russia's strategy against the insurgents and about its ability to protect against future attacks. The day after the bombing, President Dmitry Medvedev said that terrorist attacks in the country increased in 2010, although he did not cite figures.

The bomb went off in the waiting hall of the international arrivals area at the airport. As in many other airports, there were no security procedures to go through in order to get into that area.

Medvedev initially lashed out at airport management for poorly guarding the area, but the airport's operator responded that the Russian transport police are responsible for security in that part of the airport.

In the next few days, Medvedev fired several top transport police officials and ordered heightened security measures at all the country's main transport hubs, including major railway stations.

The attack took place as Medvedev was preparing to speak at the prestigious World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he hoped to reassure foreign investors that Russia was safe and attractive.

The bombing forced him to make an abbreviated trip to Davos, where he declared that the attack would not crush Russia or its drive for investment.

Skara Brae

*AP
 
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