Home>News Center>World | ||
Panic, pain mark end of Russia school siege
Half-naked and bloodied children ran terrified through the street, thirstily grabbing water bottles from medics as gunfire cracked, ambulance sirens sounded, and mothers and children wailed.
Bodies were found in the school and 400 were injured, according to Russian officials quoted by Itar-Tass news agency. A reporter for British ITV television said its cameraman saw up to 100 bodies inside the school gym where most hostages were held.. A stream of ambulances left the school carrying bodies, many of which looked lifeless.
Six bodies lay covered with white sheets near the school gates, one the almost naked corpse of a girl of around 16 with an unnaturally pale face, another a young boy, less than a meter (three feet) in height. Men and women filed past, hands covering their mouths, tentatively lifting the sheets to see if they recognized the bodies. A 40-year-old man wearing a light brown shirt kneeled by a body, crying into his hands. REUNIONS The lucky ones among the crowds of relatives who had
waited day and night outside Middle School Number 1 held emotional reunions with
children who had stripped to their underwear during two days in a stifling gym
with little water and no food.
A weeping mother stroked her child's blonde hair, a grandmother tended a young boy's bloodied face. As the battle raged, at least some of the hostage-takers fled the school building in the southern city of Beslan and were pursued by Russian troops. Thick smoke rose over the school building. Dozens of civilian cars rushed at high speed toward the school, some of them apparently commandeered by relatives desperate to find out what had happened inside the school. Anger also flared in this Russian Orthodox part of the Caucasus mountains, ethnically and religiously distinct from the nearby Muslim regions of Chechnya and Ingushetia.
Others sought to organize care of the wounded at local hospitals where 1,000 beds had been prepared, health officials told the Interfax news agency. "Everyone to the hospital! Quickly! The wounded will need blood!" shouted one policeman.
A woman in a pink dress, worn for the traditional festivities on the first day of school when the rebels seized the school, collapsed in a faint as she ran away and was bundled onto a khaki stretcher by military paramedics. Dazed girls were still wearing decorative white hair bands and ribbons in their hair, now streaked with dirt -- their first day of school now a nightmarish memory. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||