Dozens die in attacks in Russia
CHERMEN, Russia – Heavily armed militants launched overnight attacks against police buildings, border guard stations and other government offices in Ingushetia, a Russian region bordering Chechnya. Russia’s Interfax news agency reported that 46 people were killed.
The fighters seized the Interior Ministry in Nazran, the largest city in Ingushetia, and attacked the border guards’ headquarters there as well as in two villages near the border with Chechnya shortly before midnight Monday, regional emergency officials said.
Interfax, citing the Ingushetia Interior Ministry, reported that the dead included 18 police and 28 civilians.
“There are a lot of casualties, both from the law enforcement side and among civilians,” Interfax quoted Ingush President Murat Zyazikov as saying.
An official from the Ingush Interior Ministry said it was not immediately clear who the attackers were, but said some of them were shouting “Allahu akhbar” – a frequent cry of Chechnya’s separatist rebels as their insurgency increasingly comes under the influence of radical Islam. Police estimated that up to 100 militants, armed with grenade- and rocket-launchers, were involved in the assaults.
Thousands of Russian anti-terrorist special forces headed into Nazran, through the border village of Chermen in neighboring North Ossetia, in a long column of armored personnel carriers and army trucks shortly after dawn today. Inside the city, firefighters fought blazes at the Interior Ministry and its weapons storehouse, as residents cowered in their homes.
Fighting from the Chechen war has occasionally spilled into Ingushetia, highlighting the Russian military’s ineffectiveness against the rebels despite having heavier weapons and far superior manpower. The last major Ingush incursion was in October 2002, when fighters killed 17 Russian troops.
The latest attack comes after recent statements by separatist leaders indicating plans to step up military actions outside of Chechnya.
“We are planning to change tactics. Before, we concentrated our efforts on acts of sabotage, but soon we are planning to start active military actions,” Chechnya’s separatist president Aslan Maskhadov said in an interview on Radio Liberty last week.
A three-man crew from Russia’s NTV television came upon some of the presumed attackers, wearing masks and speaking accented Russian, at a border crossing as the crew tried to enter Nazran from North Ossetia.
“Out of the dark, a voice says, ‘Stop, put your hands on the hood,’ said NTV correspondent Maxim Berezin. “A man carrying an automatic weapon came up. ‘Who are you?’ “
“Then he said, ‘Say that we are the Martyr’s Brigade. … We have shot everyone here. Go and announce that.’ “
Berezin saw the bodies of at least six men in camouflage – the uniform of security service members – lying outside a minivan.
There was heavy fighting in Karabulak, where the militants attacked a border guard and customs post and a police station, and the assailants seized a police checkpoint in the village of Yandare, Ingush emergency officials said.
Acting Ingush Interior Minister Abukar Kostoyev was wounded in the first minutes of the fighting in Nazran and was taken to Vladikavkaz in North Ossetia, where he died, the Ingush Interior Ministry official said. A convoy of three ambulances later could be seen speeding into Vladikavkaz from Ingushetia.
Ingush emergency officials said that the health minister and a deputy interior minister had also been killed in the fighting in Nazran, while ITAR-Tass said a city prosecutor and a district prosecutor had died as well.
Police at the Chermen checkpoint on the North Ossetian border said that a 10-vehicle Russian military convoy had been ambushed en route to Nazran. Three vehicles from the column were later seen returning to Vladikavkaz, the North Ossetian capital, carrying an unclear number of casualties.
By early today, Russian forces had fought off the rebels attacking the border guards’ headquarters in Nazran, Ingush emergency officials said.
As dawn broke, there was still sporadic shooting in the city and in Karabulak, but the fighters were stealing away.
Although Chechnya is a largely Muslim region in overwhelmingly Christian Russia, the first of Chechnya’s two wars was an essentially secular conflict.
However, after Russian troops pulled out when Chechen rebels fought them to a standstill, the separatists increasingly took on a specifically Islamic mantle.