Suicide bomb attack on base leaves three dead and 32 injured
A SUICIDE car-bomber killed three soldiers and wounded 32 others in an attack on a military base in Russia's violence-plagued republic yesterday, officials said.
The attack took place about 1am at the base in the city of Buinaksk, said Vyacheslav Gasanov, a spokesman for the republic's Interior Ministry.
The driver of the explosives-laden small Zhiguli automobile smashed through a gate of the base in Dagestan and headed for an area where soldiers are quartered in tents, Gasanov said.
However, soldiers opened fire on him before he reached the centre of the base. Gasanov said the driver rammed the car into a military truck where it exploded. Following the blast, a roadside bomb hit a car taking investigators to the scene, but there were no injuries reported in that explosion.
Dagestan's president, Magomedsalam Magomedov, visited the scene of the attack and the wounded soldiers in the hospitals where they're being treated.
"Today's terrorist attack indicates that militants in the republic still have the power to conduct such treacherous attacks," Mr Magomedov said.
Despite "several successful" operations against the militants in the region, the country's security services have to step up their efforts to fully stamp out the militants, he said.
Dagestan is gripped by near-daily violence between police and soldiers and insurgents believed to be inspired by separatists in neighbouring Chechnya.
The attack came almost exactly 11 years after a car bomb outside an apartment building in Buinaksk housing the families of military officers killed 64 people.
The 4 September, 1999 attack was the first of four apartment bombings in Russia over a two-week period that killed 290 people and that Russian officials cited as justification for launching the second war against Chechen rebels. All the 1999 bombings were blamed on Chechen insurgents, who had recently launched an incursion into Dagestan to try to establish an Islamic state.
But suspicions persist that the bombings were orchestrated by Russian officials to justify the beginning of that war. Former Federal Security Service agent Alexander Litvinenko, who was fatally poisoned with a radioactive substance in exile in Britain in 2006, co-authored a book making those allegations.
There was no claim of responsibility for yesterday's bombings.
In Kabardino-Balkariya, another republic of the Caucasus region that includes Dagestan, a policeman was shot to death yesterday by a man whom he'd stopped for a document check, said a spokesman for the republic's Interior Ministry.
• Three ancient icons, one of which contained relics of Russia's most venerated saint, were reportedly stolen yesterday.
The RIA Novosti news agency said yesterday that clerics at the St Trinity church in a Moscow suburb discovered the theft after a service Saturday.It said one of the icons contained fragments of relics of St Sergiy of Radonezh.
The 14th-century Orthodox monk helped consolidate the Russian church in the time of Mongol rule and was later canonised as Moscow's patron saint.
Theft of icons from poorly guarded churches has become widespread since tens of thousands of churches reopened in Russia following the Soviet collapse.
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Weather for Edinburgh
Tuesday 29 May 2012
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