At least 85 killed in attacks in Russia (AP) Updated: 2005-10-14 08:39 The militants also attacked the regional headquarters of the Russian prison
system, the Emergency Situation Ministry's press office said. Interfax said a
border guards' office also came under attack.
A teacher from School No. 5, who gave only his first name, Spartak, said
children had been evacuated from the building, near a police station and an
anti-terrorism office at the center of the attacks. Black smoke billowed from
the building as panic-stricken parents searched for their children in the school
yard.
Cars were overturned or gutted by gunfire, and Russian television footage
showed the bloodied bodies of what appeared to be attackers in the streets.
The heavy fighting quieted down after about six hours, though sporadic
gunfire continued and officials said militants were holding several hostages at
a police station — and released captives said others were being held at a
building housing a souvenir shop.
Deputy Interior Minister Andrei Novikov said late
Thursday that 61 militants were killed, some from Kabardino-Balkariya and some
from other republics in the Russian Caucasus. Russian and regional
officials said 12 civilians and 12 police
officers were killed.
A Russian policeman walks past a damaged
police car in Nalchik, Russia October 13, 2005.
[Reuters] | Russian news agencies, citing figures from Russia's Center for Catastrophic
Medicine, reported that 13 people were killed and 116 others were hospitalized,
but it was unclear whether those figures referred only to civilians.
Estimates of the number of militants involved ranged from 60 to 300, and the
Interfax news agency quoted an aide to the president of Kabardino-Balkariya as
saying late Thursday that 17 had been detained.
The region has suffered a growing wave of violence as Islamic extremism is
spreading despite the government's harsh anti-terrorist methods, from targeted
killings of rebel leaders such as Aslan Maskhadov to paying rewards for
information to the demolition of houses where suspected rebels have found
refuge.
Police and security forces have fought pitched battles with militants across
the region, and the rebels have employed terrorist methods including suicide
bombings and the seizure of more than 1,000 hostages last year in a school in
the town of Beslan, 60 miles southeast of Nalchik.
The Kavkaz-Center Web site, seen as a voice for rebels loyal to Chechen
warlord Shamil Basayev, said it had received a short message claiming
responsibility for Thursday's attack on behalf of the Caucasus Front. It said
the group is part of the Chechen rebel armed forces and includes Yarmuk, an
alleged militant Islamic group based in Kabardino-Balkariya.
Deputy Prosecutor General Vladimir Kolesnikov said suspects detained during
Thursday's fighting said the offensive was carried out under orders from two
wanted militants — including an active supporter of Basayev.
But armed forces chief of staff Gen. Yuri Baluyevsky said he had no evidence
Basayev was involved in the attack. Russian officials also said no evidence
supported speculation Basayev had been killed.
As darkness fell, Chekalin said militants holed up in two offices at a police
station were holding hostages and battling security forces. Regional President
Arsen Kanokov said five or six militants held five hostages at the police
station, Interfax reported. Shots rang out late into the night while armored
personnel carriers drew close to the station.
At a building housing a souvenir shop, wounded militants released three
hostages in exchange for water, but one of those freed said the attackers were
still holding three captives.
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