Society
Belarus subway blast death toll reaches 12
Updated: 2011-04-13 07:56
By Yuras Karmanau (China Daily)
Men pray near the Oktyabrskaya metro station in central Minsk on Monday. A blast ravaged a crowded metro station in Minsk during evening rush hour, killing 12 in what President Alexander Lukashenko said was an attempt to destabilize the country. Vasily Fedosenko / Reuters |
MINSK, Belarus - Belarusian authorities said on Tuesday they have suspects in a subway bombing as the death toll rose to 12, with more than 200 wounded.
Belarus' domestic security agency said it had identified the likely perpetrator of Monday's explosion at a busy downtown subway station and was searching for him. It didn't elaborate. Interior Minister Anatoly Kuleshov said police had created composite pictures of two male suspects using testimony from witnesses. He said the bomb apparently was radio-controlled.
The Interior Ministry said the bomb placed under a bench on the Oktyabrskaya station exploded as people were coming off the trains at an evening peak hour.
The Oktyabrskaya station is within 100 meters of the presidential administration building and the Palace of the Republic, a concert hall often used for government ceremonies.
Belarus' President Alexander Lukashenko said at a meeting with officials late on Monday that foreign forces could be behind the explosion, but he didn't elaborate.
Authorities said that 204 people have sought medical help, and 157 of them have been hospitalized, including 22 in critical condition.
Viktor Sirenko, the chief doctor of the Minsk Emergency Hospital, said that many victims had lost arms or legs.
People streamed to the site of the explosion to lay flowers as police tightened security at all subway stations.
"I went through that hell, I saw that pile of disfigured bodies," 37-year-old Nina Rusetskaya said as she lit a candle at the explosion site. "I rode a car in the back of the train and only survived by miracle."
Lukashenko took his 6-year-old son to visit the site of the explosion about two hours after the blast. He later ordered the country's feared security forces to "turn everything inside-out" to find the culprits.
Police in Belarus carried out spot checks on roads and at stations and airports on Tuesday.
The explosive device, which had been packed with metal ball bearings and had a strength equivalent to 5 to 7 kgs of TNT, was apparently left under a platform bench.
AP-Reuters
Specials
Share your China stories!
Foreign readers are invited to share your China stories.
Art auctions
China accounted for 33% of global fine art sales.
Waiting for drivers' seat
Lack of sponsorship appears to be why Chinese drivers have yet to race in a Formula 1 event