Moscow Metro blast toll rises to 41, authorities suspect human bomb involvement
March 29th, 2010 - 2:34 pm ICT by ANIMoscow, Mar 29 (ANI): At least 41 people were reportedly killed in twin explosions on the Metro system in central Moscow on Monday morning.
Following the incident, the Russian administration expressed suspicion over the blast being suicidal in nature.
Moscow’s metro is one of the busiest subways in the world, carrying some 5.5 million passengers a day.
The first blast took place at the Central Lubyanka station, killing at least 26 people.
Another 15 people were killed in a second explosion, at the Park Kultury station.
According to a Moscow Metro release, 14 people were killed in the train and 12 on the platform at Lubyanka. Over 10 people sustained severe injuries.
“The blast hit the second carriage of a metro train that stopped at Lubyanka, said a spokesperson.
The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) headquarters is located just above the Lubyanka station.
Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov said both explosions were believed to have been set off by female suicide bombers as the trains entered the stations.
Moscow Chief Prosecutor Yuri Syomin said the blasts were suicide in nature.
“We can assume that belts with explosive devices were attached to their bodies,” he said.
Though no-group has yet claimed responsibility for the incident, the explosions do appear to have been co-ordinated, said a Russian official.
Suspicion is likely to fall on groups in the troubled North Caucasus region, where Russian security forces are fighting Islamist militants.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is currently visiting Siberia, is monitoring the situatuion with detailed information from security agencies.
The Moscow Emergencies Department said there was no fire and rescue teams have been pressed into service.
There was a major attack on the Moscow Metro in February 2004, when at least 39 people were killed by a bomb on a packed train as it approached the Paveletskaya Metro station.
Six months later, a suicide bomber blew herself up outside a station, killing 10 people. Both attacks were blamed on Chechen rebels, who had targeted the capital in the past.
Over the last decade Moscow has been hit by a string of deadly explosions claimed by militants from its turbulent southern region of Chechnya, but this has become less frequent in the last few years. (ANI)
- Twin blasts in Moscow Metro kills 37 - Mar 29, 2010
- US sends police officer to get data on Moscow blast - Jan 26, 2011
- Moscow metro bombings kill 35 (Third Lead) - Mar 29, 2010
- Rush hour terror attacks kill at least 37 in central Moscow - Mar 29, 2010
- Twin suicide bombings kill 38 in Moscow subway stations (Fifth lead) - Mar 29, 2010
- Terror in Moscow Metro: 37 killed in twin bombings (Fourth Lead)) - Mar 29, 2010
- Two persons killed in Russian car bomb blast - Apr 01, 2010
- Russian investigators warn of further terrorist attacks - Mar 31, 2010
- Russia mourns metro blasts victims - Mar 30, 2012
- Moscow subway bombers may have links with Pak-Afghan militants: Lavrov - Mar 30, 2010
- 'Black widows' suspected in Moscow twin blasts - Mar 30, 2010
- 32 killed in Moscow metro bombings (Second Lead) - Mar 29, 2010
- Officers who killed Moscow Metro blasts' suspect to be rewarded - Aug 22, 2010
- Militant behind Moscow metro blasts killed - Aug 21, 2010
- UPDATE: Suicide bomber kills dozens at Moscow airport - Jan 24, 2011
Tags: central moscow, chief prosecutor, explosions, explosive devices, federal security service, female suicide bombers, human bomb, lubyanka, metro station, metro system, moscow mayor, moscow metro, north caucasus region, russian administration, russian prime minister, russian security forces, second explosion, security agencies, vladimir putin, yuri luzhkov