Explosion at Russian train station kills sixteen people

Conflicting reports emerge about identity of suicide bomber in Volgograd

Investigators work at the site of an explosion at the entrance of a train station in Volgograd. Photograph: Sergei Karpov/Reuters
Investigators work at the site of an explosion at the entrance of a train station in Volgograd. Photograph: Sergei Karpov/Reuters

Sixteen people were killed and another 50 injured after a suicide bombing at a railway station in the southern Russian city of Volgograd that highlighted the region's security vulnerability just six weeks before the Winter Olympics.

The blast ripped through an area between the station entrance and metal frames that had been installed as a precaution against terror attacks. There were conflicting reports on the identity of the perpetrator; the authorities first indicated that a young woman from the Caucasus may have been responsible, as in previous attacks in Russia over the past decade. But latterly, news agencies reported that it was a man wearing a rucksack who was behind the attack, though he may not have been acting alone.

CCTV video shows a bright flash of light inside the station building as the camera, located several hundred metres across the square, shakes from the impact. A cloud of smoke emerges seconds later. Pictures on social networks show people trying to help the injured on ice-covered ground in front of the Stalin-era station building, its windows smashed by the blast.

Among the dead were a 12-year-old boy, whose father survived but lost a leg. Witnesses reported seeing many corpses.

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“I heard the blast and ran towards it,” a witness, Vladimir, told Rossiya-24. “I saw melted, twisted bits of metal, broken glass and bodies lying on the street.”

The emergencies ministry sent aircraft to take those with the worst injuries to Moscow hospitals. President Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences and sent a deputy prime minister, Olga Golodets, to the scene. He also ordered law enforcement agencies to take all necessary measures to ensure security. A federal police spokesman, Vladimir Kolesnikov, said security would be stepped up at railway stations and airports.

Earlier a statement by the Russian national anti-terrorist committee said the explosion was presumed to have been caused by a female suicide bomber, amid reports that the attacker’s head had been retrieved. One report identified the perpetrator as a Dagestani woman by the name of Oksana Aslanova, widow of a militant.

Russian media reports, quoting law-enforcement sources, said that the explosion happened after a police officer tried to stop a suspicious young woman near security gates installed to prevent guns and explosives being taken inside the station.

Soldiers found an unexploded grenade at the scene, Vladimir Markin, an investigative committee spokesman, told the news agency RIA. He said the frames installed at the entrances of all stations and airports - a security measure ridiculed in the media - had prevented more casualties. A train from Moscow was due to arrive half an hour after the explosion.

Volgograd, formerly Stalingrad, is a railway hub on the route connecting European Russia with central Asia. It acts as a gateway to the Caucasus, and is 600 miles from Sochi, the Black Sea city where the Olympics are scheduled to start on February 7th. Russian authorities have insisted there will be no security threats to the event.

In July Doku Umarov, leader of the remaining Chechen jihadist groups, warned that militants would try sabotage the games.

A Russian security expert, Andrey Soldatov, said the attack showed militants in the North Caucasus had “the capability and enough people to stage bombing attacks” on the eve of the Sochi Olympics.

“The symbolism is in the fact that the militants are capable of staging attacks beyond the North Caucasus. The tactical significance is that security forces will now have to divert their attention from Sochi to other regions of Russia.”

It was unlikely the Kremlin would need to reconsider security in Sochi, Mr Soldatov added.

Volgograd was the scene of a blast two months ago on a crowded bus, an attack also blamed on a female suicide bomber, from Dagestan. On Friday an explosion killed three people near a police station in the North Caucasus city of Pyatigorsk. (Guardian News Service)