CCTV footage of Volgograd train station suicide blast released
The blast that ripped apart a bus in the southern Russian city of Volgograd on Monday morning was probably carried out by suicide bombers from the same organisation behind Sunday's railway station explosion.
Russian television has released CCTV footage of Sunday's suicide bomb explosion inside the train station. It was detonated when a police officer became suspicious and rushed forward.
The bombs that killed more than 30 people have put the city on edge. They highlight the terrorist threat Russia is facing as it prepares to host February's Winter Olympics, 700 kilometers away in Sochi.
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GRAPHIC: Video of blast scene after second bomb attack in Russia's Volgograd
(WARNING: GRAPHIC FOOTAGE) A second deadly blast in two days has struck the southern Russian city of Volgograd. There are conflicting reports over how many have been killed. The vice governor of the region put the death toll at 15.
In the latest attack, police and ambulances reportedly arrived quickly on the scene as emergency services treated the wounded. The bus is a shell of its former self; its roof was blown off and debris strewn around the street. Federal investigators in Russia are calling the attack a terrorist act.
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Russian Soldiers Restore Damaged Railway Bridge in 30 Minutes
It took soldiers 30 minutes to set a temporary rail bridge in place during an exercise for logistics-support units near Volgograd. Watch this RIA Novosti video to see this engineering feat.
Aftermath shows devastation caused by bomb blast in Volgograd
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A second deadly bomb attack has claimed the lives of more than ten people in Volgograd in Russia. The powerful explosion reduced the blue-and-white trolley bus to a twisted, gutted carcass with its roof blown off. It follows on from Sunday's railway station attack which claimed the lives of 17 people. Russian investigators say it was caused by a male suicide bomber and federal investigators have called the blast a terrorist act. The attacks in the southern city have heightened fears of a concerted campaign of violence before the Winter Olympics in Sochi, which begin in February 2014. Report by Claire Mewse.
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Second explosion in city of Volgograd
Second explosion in city of Volgograd
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At least 14 people have been killed and 23 injured in a suspected suicide bombing on a trolleybus in the Russian city of Volgograd. The first TV pictures of the aftermath of the suspected suicide bomb show the bus blown apart, with bodies and debris strewn across the street. Investigators are working at the scene to establish how the bomb was detonated on the rush-hour trolleybus
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Russia: Bomb blast kills at least 14 and injures 28 in Volgograd
An explosion on the No.15 trolley bus in Volgograd has killed at least 14 people and injured a further 23 passengers on Monday morning.
The bomb was set off close to Kachinsky market bus stop at approximately 8.45 am local time.
The explosion follows one day after a suicide bomber from Dagestan carried out an attack at Volgograd train station on Sunday, leaving at least 17 people dead and over 40 wounded.
On October 21, 2013, a suicide bomber caused a blast on a passenger bus in Volgograd, killing five and injuring over 50 commuters.
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Russia-Explosion aboard Moscow-St.Petersburg train
T/I 10:03:30
A bomb blast on Friday night (27/6) on a train between Moscow
and St Petersburg killed at least five people and injured a
dozen.
SHOWS:
ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA 27 JUNE 1997
WS Moscow Station in St Petersburg, with train No. 24 halted
at platform and armed police;
CU special operations police on platform;
CU doorway of train car, man checking off passengers
on list;
police with sniffer dogs on platform;
CU woman passenger looking through open window;
police next to train;
Ambulance speeding along platform;
two doctors walking along platform;
railway worker walking and talking into radio;
young injured man with plaster on face standing on platform;
INT ambulance, doctor;
SOT injured man (in Russian) It was probably a bomb, half the car was lifted up into the air, blew away. There was an explosion, glass went flying everywhere and the roof fell in.;
WS train, police and children on platform
WS Moscow station concourse;
SOT Pavel Babaitsev, station manager (in Russian) There was
a bomb on train number 24 from Moscow to St Petersburg.
According to preliminary information there are four dead and
four people injured who were taken off the train at Malaya
Veshera, about six or ten people. The hospitals have the exact
information.
WS Moscow station concourse
MOSCOW, RUSSIA 27 JUNE 1997
WS Leningrad Station in Moscow;
CU departure information sign St Petersburg;
VOX POP woman (in Russian) I didn't know. I didn't watch TV.
If they had shown it then I ought to have known. That's
absolutely terrible.;
ca crowd;
VOX POP woman (in Russian) Good heavens, of course we're not
going to change our plans.;
VOX POP man Of course we'll go. There's no point in putting it off now.;
MS crowd;
CU St Petersburg-Moscow sign on train;
pan to train pulling out of station.
Runs 3.11
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Russia: Businessman Sergei Polonsky found guilty of $43m fraud but freed instantly
Businessman Sergei Polonsky was found guilty of embezzling $43 million in real estate and sentenced to five years in a penal colony by the Presnensky Court in Moscow, Wednesday. However, the court ordered him to be released, saying that the statute of limitations has expired.
Speaking to the press, Polonsky noted that his plans for the future are to change the world, particularly the system of education and development of people.
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'Don't sleep, Olya!' Train station worker saves 9yo victim of Volgograd blast
Russia's city of Volgograd remains on high alert with heavy police patrols in the streets and in public places, as a stream of mourners visit the sites of the two terror blasts. After a suicide bomber struck at Volgograd's railway station, Yury Frisler rushed out of the building with 9-year-old Olya in his arms, desperately looking for an ambulance for the badly-injured girl who was losing consciousness. Olya Ivanenko is one of 65 seriously wounded in the Volgograd bombings, who are still receiving hospital treatment. READ MORE:
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Death Toll In Russia Bombing Jumps As Attacker Identified
NBC News has reported that a a suicide bomber behind the attack on the St. Petersburg, Russia subway has been identified, as the death toll rose to 14. Russian investigators said body parts of the suspect were found in the third car of the train. Officials in the central Asian state of Kyrgyzstan identified that suspect as a Kyrgyz-born man in his 20s, according to the Associated Press and Reuters, but Russian authorities did not confirm that information. The explosion, which came while President Vladimir Putin was visiting his home city, tore through a train, killing 14 and wounding dozens. Police later found and defused a shrapnel-packed explosive device at another station.
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Volgograd bus blast: at least 15 killed, 23 wounded
Originally published on December 30, 2013
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At least 15 people were killed and 23 wounded when a bomb went off on a trolleybus in the city of Volgograd, Russia on Monday (December 30).
According to the RT, the bomb may have been planted in the central part of the trolley bus rather than brought onboard by a suicide bomber. The explosion was reportedly set off when the bus was near a busy market in the city's Dzerzhinsky during morning rush hour
The explosion came only a day after a suicide bomb attack killed at least 17 people in the main railway station in the same city.
According to CNN, the Russian authorities have labelled the two incidents as 'terrorist attacks'. However, no one has yet claimed responsibility for the explosions.
Russia is set to hold the Winter Olympics in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, some 690 kilometers southwest of Volgograd, starting on February 7. According to Russia, insurgents who want to carve an Islamic state out of the southern Russia have claimed that they will use maximum force to prevent the games from being held.
Reax and analysis as tight Sochi security raises rights concerns
Russia's pledge to host the the safest Olympics in history at the Sochi Winter games in 2014, is creating more concerns that authorities are stifling dissent and violating privacy.
Organisers have introduced some of the most extensive identity checks and sweeping security measures ever seen at an international sports event.
Anyone wanting to attend the opening of the games on February 7 will have to buy an online ticket where spectators will be asked to provide passport details and contacts so that authorities can screen who's allowed in.
American expat Lara McCoy Roslof, who has been living in Moscow for several years, appeared resigned to the lengthy security procedures, as she bought tickets for the games.
Everything they do to prevent people from getting access to the site is probably a good thing. Maybe it's overkill, but I feel, as an American, since 9/11 we've given up so many of our, you know, privacy, rights in the name of security, she said.
The Kremlin says the measures are needed to prevent the threat of attacks, but independent security analyst, Andrei Soldatov, says the checks will do little to deter homegrown threats.
Obviously this kind of pass and this kind of measure might stop some people to go to (going to) the Olympics, he said.
But these kind of measures cannot deal with the people who actually live in the area or might live close to the area, I mean, for example, people who live in the North Caucasus.
Organisers are concerned about security because of Sochi's close proximity to the troubled North Caucasus region of Russia.
A deadly suicide bombing in Volgograd which killed six last month highlighted the security risks Sochi faces.
The tens of thousands of police, security agents and army troops to be deployed in Sochi are twice as many as during the London Summer Games.
Analysts say that the security zone created around Sochi stretches approximately 100 kilometres (60 miles) along the Black Sea coast and up to 40 kilometres inland.
Russian forces include special troops equipped for patrolling the forested mountains towering over the resort, speed boats to
patrol the coast and state-of-the art sonars to spot submarines.
The security regime includes a ban on the entry of all cars from outside the zone starting one month before the games and ending only one month after they end.
Vehicles involved in servicing the Olympics but registered elsewhere need special passes.
Inside the Sochi security zone, the government has a list of more than 600 facilities to be put under special protection months before the games.
Along with the Olympic facilities, bridges, railway tunnels and depots, the list includes Sochi schools, kindergartens, hospitals, hotels, restaurants and stores.
Russian security agencies have developed a massive surveillance system that critics say will allow them to intercept any phone calls and Internet traffic, with a particular emphasis on Sochi.
Months before the games, security agencies have moved to expel some of those whom they consider unwelcome.
In particular, police have conducted sweeping document checks among thousands of migrant workers who were recruited to build Olympic facilities and deported many, drawing criticism from rights groups.
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Medvedev sets out his 'big' vision for Moscow
President Dmitry Medvedev met with Moscow authorities on Wednesday to discuss his vision for the Russian capital.
The president wants to double the city's size and improve its infrastructure and transport network.
His plan would take nearly two decades to complete....
MOSCOW: SECURITY MEASURES TIGHTENED AFTER BOMB 1
Eng/Dutch/Nat
XFA
Security measures have been tightened in the Russian capital Moscow on Wednesday after Tuesday's bomb blast which ripped through one of the cities busiest areas killing seven people and injuring scores of others.
Two men were arrested early on Wednesday and are being questioned in connection with the explosion, which Moscow authorities are blaming on Chechen rebels.
Russia has been fighting Muslim rebels in the breakaway republic of Chechnya for almost one year.
Moscow woke to an uneasy calm on Wednesday, as citizens tried to come to terms with Tuesday's bomb explosion and the potential for terror in their midst.
Seven people died and 93 others were injured, some seriously, when Tuesday's explosion ripped through an underground passageway in Pushkin Square in the centre of the city.
On Wednesday floral tributes were left at the scene in memory of those who died.
Many people made their way to work past city workers washing blood off the walls of the passageway.
Scores of people went to local hospitals to donate blood for those wounded in the bombing.
On every street corner increased security measures were in evidence, fearful of another deadly bomb attack by suspected Chechen rebels
Worried Muscovites are speculating that the city could face a new bombing campaign less than a year after a series of attacks, also blamed on rebels from the Caucus region.
That wave of bombings prompted, the then prime minister and current President, Vladimir Putin's war against Muslim rebels in the renegade republic of Chechnya.
Two men were arrested on Wednesday and are being questioned in connection with the blast.
The Federal Security Service, the main domestic intelligence agency which was heading the investigation, said the suspects fitted descriptions of two men spotted moments before the bomb exploded.
A third suspect is still being sought.
The security service said one of the two detained suspects was from Chechnya and the other from the neighbouring region of Dagestan.
Russian authorities tend to arrest people from the Caucasus region whenever there are terrorist attacks and the police have a poor record of catching culprits in such cases.
However Chechen leaders deny their forces were involved.
Tourists visiting the Russian capital on Wednesday are concerned for their safety.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
I am very scared and stressed because it is really terrible. I do not know why it happened, I do not know if it was terrorists from Chechnya.
SUPER CAPTION: Paula, Italian Tourist
SOUNDBITE: (Dutch)
It will scare people off from visiting Moscow. People who saw it on TV were very scared. And, my whole family called me in Moscow because they were really worried after what they saw on the news.
SUPER CAPTION: Jacline Peters, Dutch Tourist
Emergency officials said on Wednesday that two U-S citizens were among those injured in the blast.
One of them was a 13-year old boy who was being treated at a Moscow children's hospital for burns.
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Russia train station suicide bomb blast: attacker and 16 victims dead
Originally published on December 30, 2013
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At least 17 people were killed, including the bomber, when a suicide bomber detonated explosives inside Volgograd train station on Sunday (December 29). According to authorities, the female attacker detonated a shrapnel-filled bomb in front of a metal detector just inside the main station.
Television footage captured the moment of the blast, with a giant orange fireball filling the hall of the station, followed by clouds of smoke pouring out of the front gate and broken windows. The station was busier than usual as many people were traveling for the holidays.
The Federal Investigative Committee and other officials said the attacker became nervous and detonated the device after a police officer started to approach her near the metal detector. An investigation revealed that the bomb consisted of roughly 10 kg of TNT and shrapnel.
Reuters reports that, Islamist militants in the North Caucasus have carried out a long string of attacks since President Vladimir Putin came to power in 2000. They now confront him with his biggest security challenge, threatening to disrupt the Olympics that start in the Black Sea resort of Sochi in 40 days.
The attack, just over two months after a female suicide bomber killed six people on a bus in the same city, raised questions about the effectiveness of security measures which the Kremlin routinely orders increased after bombings.
It could add to concerns about the government's ability to safeguard the Sochi Olympics, which open on Feb. 7. Putin has staked much of his prestige on staging safe and successful Games, a chance to show how far Russia has come since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
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Шиес. Как люди защищают свою землю
Шиес: большой народный протест против московского мусора. История, интервью, палаточный лагерь активистов.
Маленькая станция Шиес в Архангельской области, ещё несколько лет назад про неё никто не слышал. А сегодня Шиес стал центром внимания для всей России. Власти хотят свозить сюда московский мусор, но они встретили беспрецедентное народное сопротивление. В этом фильме я постараюсь разобраться, что сейчас происходит на Шиесе.
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Magnitogorsk, the capital of Russian iron and steel works
Magnitogorsk is an industrial city in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, located on the eastern side of the Ural Mountains. The city played an important role during World War II because it supplied much of the steel for the Soviet war machine.
Credit: Ricardo Marquina
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