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Deadly explosions on Moscow Metro system

Backgrounder: Major metro blasts in Russia since 1998

English.news.cn 2010-03-29 13:57:44 FeedbackPrintRSS

Special Report: Twin blasts rock Moscow subway

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A fire-fighter and Interior Ministry officers work near the entrance of the Lubyanka metro station in Moscow March 29, 2010. An explosion ripped through Lubyanka station in central Moscow at rush hour on Monday, killing at least 20 people and wounding 11 more, the Emergencies Ministry said. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)


BEIJING, March 29 (Xinhua) -- Two explosions hit the Moscow subway system on Monday morning, killing at least 37 people, Russian news agencies reported.

The Emergency Situations Ministry said the first blast, which struck the Lubyanka station at 7:56 a.m. (0356 GMT), had killed at least 25 people and injured at least 10 others, the Itar-Tass news agency reported.

Shortly afterwards, an explosion hit another subway station, killing at least 12 people with 12 others injured at the Cultural Park subway station.

The following is a chronology of some major subway bombings in Moscow since 1998:

On Jan. 1, 1998, an abandoned handbag exploded on a subway platform in central Moscow, wounding three subway employees.

On Aug. 8, 2000, a blast tore through a busy central Moscow metro underpass during the evening rush hour, killing at least eight people and injuring 18 others.

On Feb. 5, 2001, a bomb exploded in Moscow's metro station Belorusskaya, injuring 10 people including two children.

On Feb. 6, 2004, at least 41 were killed and more than 130 others injured when a deadly blast ripped through a crowded metro car in the Russian capital during morning rush hour.

Backgrounder: Major metro blasts in Russia since 1998
 
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Dear Ms. Jana,

I have been reading your posts on various militancy-related for quite sometime. Whether it is Americans, us Europeans, Indians or even Russians, you seem to do little to hide your hatred of all these communities. Your hatred for Indians is understandable to me since they are your political rivals, but why others?

What did those metro people do to Chechens? Now coming back to the question of "occupation and independence" Don't you think that even your countries have independence movements. But they are illegal, aren't they?

Terrorism has no excuse and has to be condemned regardless of what country it is targeting. These terrorists don't have the courage to fight the government but will target non-participants. This is happening in your country as well, whoever be causing it. What is being achieved? Anarchy, economic crisis, instability, fear and mental trauma to the common citizen.

Don't you think that talking about everyone in the same limelight around is making you look almost as though you justify terrorism? Please think about what you have just said. It is against not Russian government but humanity.

Terrorism is no way to go. Please place your mother or siblings or even a close friend in that metro and then consider your words. Hopefully you will realize that every separatist movement isn't justified and certainly not through terrorism.


Dont play the victim card. No one is justifying this attack neither other such attacks.

Terming Russian occupation of Chechnya is also biased and onesided and menifestation of hatered because Chechans are Muslims.


And dont try to portray me as hater of Americans, Europeans and Russians, because the Innocent Americans, Innocent Europeans and Innocent Russians have nothing to with wrong policies of their governnments and neither i hate the people But the terrorist policies of their govts.
 
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Don't talk from your wrong end. What are you implying by terrorism started from us? How old are you? 10? If you don't have sensible matters to discuss don't ruin this thread.

Terrorism is a global phenomenon from South America to Europe to Asia to Oceania. Venture outside your home for once and then talk.

Pshchoanalysis would be good for u.
 
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Chechnya: The Republic of the Wolf
by Margaret S. Busé

In a state of humanitarian crisis, Chechnya, the poorest of states within the Russian Federation, continues to strive for independence. The pre-war arsenal of landmines consisted primarily of PMN and OMZ mines. Stocks of PMs were moved to secret bases in the mountain regions during the war. There is also a considerable black market for landmines.

The Russian army and the Chechen rebels have used mines in the previous and current war, laying mines around their bases, checkpoints, militarily significant towns and roadways. Mines have continued to be used as booby traps in houses and schoolyards, and littered around corpses. AP mines, while used by the military on both sides, are also used by various armed groups and robbers in attacks against political figures.

From 1994 to 1996, the Russian Federation waged war against the people of Chechnya in an attempt to halt the country's growing independence. The number of civilian dead as a result was estimated between 40,000-100,000. At the start of the war, mines were still being cleared from WWII. HALO Trust said it had seen new minefields laid even after the previous peace agreement had been signed in 1996. The intensity of Russian bombardment of Chechnya is said to have exceeded Stalingrad. Serbian bombardment of Sarajevo reached 3,500 per day, Grozny experienced 4,000 shells per hour. The Russian Federation blanketed Chechnya with 1,200,000 landmines during the 1994-1996 war and estimates of the cost of damage may be as high as $150 million.


Despite Chechnya's high landmine count, Chechnya still remains unlisted on the UN landmine list. Even though a peace agreement was signed on August 4, 1995, bloodshed has again found this country escalating the landmine crisis as landmines are laid indiscriminately and as the front line shifts.



During the previous war, as control shifted from one side to the other, territories were repeatedly mined and re-mined. Landmines may affect as much as 80% of Chechnya. Because of the current fighting and because no mine field maps have been made available, a comprehensive survey is nearly impossible. Before the current war, there were 600,000 people in Chechnya living beside over 1.2 million landmines. HALO Trust estimates that 20,000 hectares of farmland cannot be used because of the presence of landmines. This has severe consequences for communities that must rely on farming for sustainability.

In the first three months of fighting, from October-December 1999, a force of up to 100,000 Russian troops had taken almost total control of Chechnya's lowland valleys and steppes. The remaining areas had been held by the guerrillas. Parts of Grozny itself and the steep gorges in the mountains to the south, are much more difficult military targets for a conventional army. Despite heavy fighting in early January, neither side appeared to make significant gains in the south of the city. Both forces occupied high points on the outskirts of the city for a considerable time.

There was constant fire from mortars, cannon and light arms. At night, tracer fire lit up the sky. It was impossible to know how many residents were still trapped in the city, but there were clearly thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, living in dark cellars with little food. "The city has been heavily mined by the Islamic guerrillas Russia invaded Chechnya to uproot," General Kazantsev said. If his troops tried to storm the city, large numbers of people would certainly be killed and wounded.

Russia's military Commander, General Viktor Kazantsev felt his forces have been too "tender hearted" in Chechnya. The Russian army then formulated new policies in an attempt to gain a better foothold with the rebels. Use of fuel air explosives, pressure on the Moscow media not to give "air time to terrorists," and the alarming new policy to round up all Chechen males between the ages of 10 and 60 are some of the Russian army's tactics to bring about some resolution. Many of the Chechen males are expected to be sent to filtration camps (prison camps). Human Rights Watch has reported unspeakable acts of torture on the men and women held in these camps.

Russian history is full of precedent for this type of military action. The Czars and Stalin had also attempted ethnic cleansing of the Muslims because the Muslims had wanted independence from Russia. The attempt to prevent Chechnya's independence by Russia may only result in a long, bloody and continuous war. Sergei Koualyev, a deputy of the Russian State of Duma, predicts the Chechen war is likely to turn into an Afghan-type guerilla war that will last for years. The Chechens may continue to fight slowly, patiently and without rest until they have their freedom.

Western nations had encouraged a cease-fire, but Russia has refused, stating that a cease-fire would only allow the rebels to regroup. Secretary of State Madeline Albright encourages Russia to seek a political solution to Chechen independence. France and Britain have hinted at the possibility of sanctions on Russia. "One cannot take a civilian population hostage, threaten to treat an entire population as terrorists, and ask us (European nations) to show understanding," said spokeswoman Catherine Colonna. The International Monetary Fund announced that the release of funds to Russia had been delayed until Russia implements legal and administrative changes though some sources deny that the delay is related to the current situation in Chechnya.

Mine action funding, mine clearance and mine awareness are completely non-existent in the current state of crisis in Chechnya. The few NGO's that have operated there can only spend limited time in the area. The ICRC withdrew after the assassination of 6 workers in 1996. MERLIN, (Medical Emergency Relief International) did distribute mine awareness posters from 1996-1998, but withdrew later that same year.

HALO Trust withdrew in December 1999. HALO trust may have been one of the last NGO's operating in Chechnya. When the fighting got too severe for mine clearance work, HALO switched its efforts to moving medical supplies between hospitals and maintaining generators for the civilians. Recently, when the Russians bombarded a mine field that HALO had been clearing, three of HALO's staff were killed. "There are no distinctions between civilian and military targets. If it moves they strike it with aircraft, and if it does not move they shell it," says HALO director Guy Willoughby. Many feel that HALO was doing instrumental work in Chechneya, clearing mines and aiding in humanitarian relief efforts.

The Chechen civilians are caught in the middle of the fighting. Many want to leave through the "safe" corridors the Russians have provided. They can't trust the roadways. There are numerous stories of the Russian soldiers demanding bribes and looting belongings at checkpoints. "To the north are Russian guns, to the south villages are being hit. They are afraid of becoming targets on both sides of this war," says Willoughby.

Landmine casualties and victim assistance data is not reliable. Estimates from the previous war cite 800 casualties in 1996, half of which were children. 10% of Children suffer from acute posttraumatic stress disorders as a result of landmine accidents. Victim assistance was nearly impossible prior to the current fighting. The health care system in Chechnya was inadequate before the war because of severe shortages of equipment, medicine and water. If medical care is available, the victim must pay for any prosthesis and crutches.

Social and economic problems were and will continue to be staggering. Lack of financial support from other countries, information blockades and the absence of humanitarian relief are all devastating to this tiny mountain country. Only a peace settlement and mutual cooperation will allow humanitarian organizations to safely begin the seemingly insurmountable task of rebuilding the lives of the Chechen people.

Currently, the situation for the Russian Rebels is dire. While multiple rocket launchers are still being fired at Grozny, the brunt of the fighting has now moved to the highlands, the last rebel stronghold. Russian forces have launched an intensive military attack in Alkhan-Kala village where their have been many rebel casualties to include prominent rebel commanders.

Western military forces have asserted that the attack on Alkhan-Kala was an ambush. The Chechens were lured there. The fighters were deliberately given a "corridor" to escape Grozny. This "corridor" was actually a minefield and several hundred rebel fighters were killed when they entered it. The few dozen who successfully crossed and reached Alkhan-Kala found the Russians waiting for them.

At the beginning of the new millenium, Russia is once again faced with defining its future, as it did in the early twentieth century. Former president Yeltsin, chagrined by the comments of leaders in the European Union and the United States over the aggressive assault on Chechnya, has made the comment, "They must have forgotten for a moment what Russia is. It has a full arsenal of nuclear weapons." This may be so, but there is also a rampant black market operating, severe food shortages, and republics in their federation breaking away from the motherland. While none will dispute the need for a country to remain strong, unified and prosperous, these are not the conditions of the current Russian Federation.


Chechnya: the Republic of the Wolf, by Margaret S. Buse (4.1)
 
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Chechnya: The Republic of the Wolf
by Margaret S. Busé

In a state of humanitarian crisis, Chechnya, the poorest of states within the Russian Federation, continues to strive for independence. The pre-war arsenal of landmines consisted primarily of PMN and OMZ mines. Stocks of PMs were moved to secret bases in the mountain regions during the war. There is also a considerable black market for landmines.

The Russian army and the Chechen rebels have used mines in the previous and current war, laying mines around their bases, checkpoints, militarily significant towns and roadways. Mines have continued to be used as booby traps in houses and schoolyards, and littered around corpses. AP mines, while used by the military on both sides, are also used by various armed groups and robbers in attacks against political figures.

From 1994 to 1996, the Russian Federation waged war against the people of Chechnya in an attempt to halt the country's growing independence. The number of civilian dead as a result was estimated between 40,000-100,000. At the start of the war, mines were still being cleared from WWII. HALO Trust said it had seen new minefields laid even after the previous peace agreement had been signed in 1996. The intensity of Russian bombardment of Chechnya is said to have exceeded Stalingrad. Serbian bombardment of Sarajevo reached 3,500 per day, Grozny experienced 4,000 shells per hour. The Russian Federation blanketed Chechnya with 1,200,000 landmines during the 1994-1996 war and estimates of the cost of damage may be as high as $150 million.


Despite Chechnya's high landmine count, Chechnya still remains unlisted on the UN landmine list. Even though a peace agreement was signed on August 4, 1995, bloodshed has again found this country escalating the landmine crisis as landmines are laid indiscriminately and as the front line shifts.



During the previous war, as control shifted from one side to the other, territories were repeatedly mined and re-mined. Landmines may affect as much as 80% of Chechnya. Because of the current fighting and because no mine field maps have been made available, a comprehensive survey is nearly impossible. Before the current war, there were 600,000 people in Chechnya living beside over 1.2 million landmines. HALO Trust estimates that 20,000 hectares of farmland cannot be used because of the presence of landmines. This has severe consequences for communities that must rely on farming for sustainability.

In the first three months of fighting, from October-December 1999, a force of up to 100,000 Russian troops had taken almost total control of Chechnya's lowland valleys and steppes. The remaining areas had been held by the guerrillas. Parts of Grozny itself and the steep gorges in the mountains to the south, are much more difficult military targets for a conventional army. Despite heavy fighting in early January, neither side appeared to make significant gains in the south of the city. Both forces occupied high points on the outskirts of the city for a considerable time.

There was constant fire from mortars, cannon and light arms. At night, tracer fire lit up the sky. It was impossible to know how many residents were still trapped in the city, but there were clearly thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, living in dark cellars with little food. "The city has been heavily mined by the Islamic guerrillas Russia invaded Chechnya to uproot," General Kazantsev said. If his troops tried to storm the city, large numbers of people would certainly be killed and wounded.

Russia's military Commander, General Viktor Kazantsev felt his forces have been too "tender hearted" in Chechnya. The Russian army then formulated new policies in an attempt to gain a better foothold with the rebels. Use of fuel air explosives, pressure on the Moscow media not to give "air time to terrorists," and the alarming new policy to round up all Chechen males between the ages of 10 and 60 are some of the Russian army's tactics to bring about some resolution. Many of the Chechen males are expected to be sent to filtration camps (prison camps). Human Rights Watch has reported unspeakable acts of torture on the men and women held in these camps.

Russian history is full of precedent for this type of military action. The Czars and Stalin had also attempted ethnic cleansing of the Muslims because the Muslims had wanted independence from Russia. The attempt to prevent Chechnya's independence by Russia may only result in a long, bloody and continuous war. Sergei Koualyev, a deputy of the Russian State of Duma, predicts the Chechen war is likely to turn into an Afghan-type guerilla war that will last for years. The Chechens may continue to fight slowly, patiently and without rest until they have their freedom.

Western nations had encouraged a cease-fire, but Russia has refused, stating that a cease-fire would only allow the rebels to regroup. Secretary of State Madeline Albright encourages Russia to seek a political solution to Chechen independence. France and Britain have hinted at the possibility of sanctions on Russia. "One cannot take a civilian population hostage, threaten to treat an entire population as terrorists, and ask us (European nations) to show understanding," said spokeswoman Catherine Colonna. The International Monetary Fund announced that the release of funds to Russia had been delayed until Russia implements legal and administrative changes though some sources deny that the delay is related to the current situation in Chechnya.

Mine action funding, mine clearance and mine awareness are completely non-existent in the current state of crisis in Chechnya. The few NGO's that have operated there can only spend limited time in the area. The ICRC withdrew after the assassination of 6 workers in 1996. MERLIN, (Medical Emergency Relief International) did distribute mine awareness posters from 1996-1998, but withdrew later that same year.

HALO Trust withdrew in December 1999. HALO trust may have been one of the last NGO's operating in Chechnya. When the fighting got too severe for mine clearance work, HALO switched its efforts to moving medical supplies between hospitals and maintaining generators for the civilians. Recently, when the Russians bombarded a mine field that HALO had been clearing, three of HALO's staff were killed. "There are no distinctions between civilian and military targets. If it moves they strike it with aircraft, and if it does not move they shell it," says HALO director Guy Willoughby. Many feel that HALO was doing instrumental work in Chechneya, clearing mines and aiding in humanitarian relief efforts.

The Chechen civilians are caught in the middle of the fighting. Many want to leave through the "safe" corridors the Russians have provided. They can't trust the roadways. There are numerous stories of the Russian soldiers demanding bribes and looting belongings at checkpoints. "To the north are Russian guns, to the south villages are being hit. They are afraid of becoming targets on both sides of this war," says Willoughby.

Landmine casualties and victim assistance data is not reliable. Estimates from the previous war cite 800 casualties in 1996, half of which were children. 10% of Children suffer from acute posttraumatic stress disorders as a result of landmine accidents. Victim assistance was nearly impossible prior to the current fighting. The health care system in Chechnya was inadequate before the war because of severe shortages of equipment, medicine and water. If medical care is available, the victim must pay for any prosthesis and crutches.

Social and economic problems were and will continue to be staggering. Lack of financial support from other countries, information blockades and the absence of humanitarian relief are all devastating to this tiny mountain country. Only a peace settlement and mutual cooperation will allow humanitarian organizations to safely begin the seemingly insurmountable task of rebuilding the lives of the Chechen people.

Currently, the situation for the Russian Rebels is dire. While multiple rocket launchers are still being fired at Grozny, the brunt of the fighting has now moved to the highlands, the last rebel stronghold. Russian forces have launched an intensive military attack in Alkhan-Kala village where their have been many rebel casualties to include prominent rebel commanders.

Western military forces have asserted that the attack on Alkhan-Kala was an ambush. The Chechens were lured there. The fighters were deliberately given a "corridor" to escape Grozny. This "corridor" was actually a minefield and several hundred rebel fighters were killed when they entered it. The few dozen who successfully crossed and reached Alkhan-Kala found the Russians waiting for them.

At the beginning of the new millenium, Russia is once again faced with defining its future, as it did in the early twentieth century. Former president Yeltsin, chagrined by the comments of leaders in the European Union and the United States over the aggressive assault on Chechnya, has made the comment, "They must have forgotten for a moment what Russia is. It has a full arsenal of nuclear weapons." This may be so, but there is also a rampant black market operating, severe food shortages, and republics in their federation breaking away from the motherland. While none will dispute the need for a country to remain strong, unified and prosperous, these are not the conditions of the current Russian Federation.


Chechnya: the Republic of the Wolf, by Margaret S. Buse (4.1)


More power to our russian brothers. Go Putin Go
 
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It's always the innocent that the suffer most. I am sure no politician or army men were died in this blast but it's also true that russia occupied in another man land by force thus retalition comes in such inhumane form. As newton 3rd law stated: To every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction:

Let the innocent be rest in peace.
 
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Innocent civilians getting Killed anywhere in world is not acceptable.

RIP.
 
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It's always the innocent that the suffer most. I am sure no politician or army men were died in this blast but it's also true that russia occupied in another man land by force thus retalition comes in such inhumane form. As newton 3rd law stated: To every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction:

Let the innocnet rest in peace.

And Russians are known for their dispropotionate reactions... The reprisals are going to be swift and brutal.

May the dead RIP
 
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It's always the innocent that the suffer most. I am sure no politician or army men were died in this blast but it's also true that russia occupied in another man land by force thus retalition comes in such inhumane form. As newton 3rd law stated: To every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction:

Let the innocnet rest in peace.

Strong countries dont do equal equal they inflict massive damage to terrorists.Seems these psychos have bitten lot more than they can chew.
 
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No clue.. Was watching news and saw the Russian ambassador making this statement live on TV

It seems living in India has made the Russian Ambassador adopt Indian mentality & think like them also, patakhaa phattaa nahien and ungali uthaa do Pakistan per.

Typical.
 
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It seems living in India has made the Russian Ambassador adopt Indian mentality & think like them also, patakhaa phattaa nahien and ungali uthaa do Pakistan per.

Typical.

Dont worry about indians and indian ambassador watch how terrorists should be treated.Hope u see the upcoming reprisals closely.
 
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MOSCOW ATTACKS MAY HAVE A LINK TO PAKISTAN​

Al Qaeda’s Chechen hand in Moscow blasts?​
Sri Lanka Guardian: Al Qaeda’s Chechen hand in Moscow blasts?
By B.Raman

(March 29, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) "Russia, China, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan have been closely monitoring the activities of various pro-Al Qaeda groups operating in Xinjiang, the Central Asian Republics (CARs), Chechnya and Dagestan in Russia. Recent reports indicate that the Uzbecks, Chechens and Uighurs trained in Al Qaeda training camps in North Waziristan have started moving towards their home bases in order to step up their jihad against the Governments of these countries and to disrupt the movement of logistic supplies to the US and other NATO troops through their territory. It is the assessment of well-informed Pakistani Police sources in the Pashtun areas that during the last two weeks there has been a decrease in the activities of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan because trained TTP elements have been moving into Afghanistan to help the Afghan Taliban in its operations against the US-UK offensive in the Helmand province of Afghanistan. The TTP cadres are going in replacement of the Uighurs, Uzbeks and Chechens who are being moved towards Central Asia, Xinjiang and Chechnya. This also suits the Pakistan Army since it relieves pressure on it. An upsurge in acts of terrorism in this region is apprehended. Russia cannot afford to be complacent over the situation in Chechnya and Dagestan. As the fighting in Afghanistan escalates, reprisal attacks by Al Qaeda and pro-Al Qaeda organisations in areas such as South-East, South and Central Asia and in the Muslim majority regions of Russia is a possibility to be reckoned with. " ---- Extract from my article of August 4,2009, titled " Pro-Al Qaeda Elements Regrouping For Fresh Strikes " at ( Click here)

The CNN TV channel of the US has reported that a Web site associated with Chechen separatists has claimed responsibility for the two explosions in two subway stations of Central Moscow on the morning of March 29,2010, which resulted in the death of at least 37 persons. While the authenticity of the claim is yet to be established, jihadi terrorists from Chechnya trained in the past by Al Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban had till 2004 exhibited a capability for mass casualty suicide or suicidal terrorism in the heart of Moscow.

A month before the Madrid blasts of March 2004 by pro-Al Qaeda elements, pro-Al Qaeda Chechens had killed 39 persons by planting an improvised explosive device (IED) in a Moscow Metro station . This was followed by a suspected suicide bombing in the Moscow Metro in August 2004 in which 10 persons died. In November 2004, a Chechen-trained jihadi group from the Caucasian region of Russia planted an IED in an inter-city train from Moscow to St.Petersburg killing 29 persons.

While the Russian authorities had claimed to have neutralised the jihadi groups operating in Chechnya and restored normalcy there, Chechens of Afghanistan vintage operating from sanctuaries in the North Waziristan area of Pakistan had maintained their capability for acts of terrorism.Many of them work as instructors in the training camps of different pro-Al Qaeda organisations in the North Waziristan area, including in the training camps of the anti-Shia Lashkar-e-Jhangvi,the so-called 313 Brigade of Ilyas Kashmiri, one of the handling officers of David Coleman Headley of the Chicago cell of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), and the islamic Jihad Union (IJU) also known as the Islamic Jihad Group (IJG), a splinter group of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU).

Since the Uighur uprising in the Xinjiang province of China in July,2009, there were reports from reliable sources that Al Qaeda and its associates have been targeting Russia and the Central Asian Republics as a reprisal for their agreement to allow logistic supplies for the NATO forces in Afghanistan to move through their territory.

The Chechens---- the pro-Al Qaeda jihadis as well as separatists not associated with Al Qaeda-- have also been wanting to prove wrong Russian security agencies, which have been claiming to have crushed the Chechen separatists and restored normalcy in Chechnya. But reports from the Caucasian region of Russia have been indicating that jihadi terrorists continue to be active in the Ingushetia region. In February, at least 20 insurgents were reportedly killed in an operation by Russian security forces in Ingushetia.

Many Chechens work as security guards and manual labour in the commercial establishments of Moscow. Often, pro-Al Qaeda Chechens use them for creating sleeper cells in Moscow.

If it is established that pro-Al Qaeda Chechens have staged a come-back by organising the two suicide explosions of March 29,2010, in the Moscow Metro, it should be a matter of concern not only to the Russian security agencies, but also to those of the CARs and the Xinjiang province of China. Likelihood of threats to the security of the forthcoming Shanghai Expo from pro-Al Qaeda Chechens or Uighurs or Uzbecks would increase. This has to be factored into in the security drill not only at the Expo, but also in Xinjiang.
 
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why pakistan army is not able to destroy training camps on their land????

these terrorists are defaming pakistan

whats the problem in removing them???
 
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why pakistan army is not able to destroy training camps on their land????

these terrorists are defaming pakistan

whats the problem in removing them???

They call them freedom fighters as they call(or think) the chechans.
 
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Why all the pakistanies have disappeared from this thread as soon as post related to pakistan involvement in moscow bombings is posted...

previously there were many??
 
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