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Moscow attack: Lukashenko says attackers first tried to flee to Belarus

2024-03-26T19:14:54.815Z

Highlights: Moscow attack: Lukashenko says attackers first tried to flee to Belarus. The Belarusian president's version contradicts Moscow's account, which claimed the alleged attackers tried to reach Ukraine. On Tuesday, the head of Russian secret services, Alexander Bortnikov, accused Ukraine and the West of having facilitated the attack near Moscow. On Monday, Vladimir Putin admitted for the first time, three days after the events and the IS claim, that alleged attackers were “radical Islamists”, while continuing to point the finger at Ukraine.


The Belarusian president's version contradicts Moscow's account, which claimed the alleged attackers tried to reach


Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said Tuesday that the suspected perpetrators of the attack at a concert hall near Moscow had initially tried to flee to his country.

“They were unable to enter Belarus.

They saw this and so they changed route and went towards the Russian-Ukrainian border,” he said, quoted in a presidential press release.

With this statement, this close ally of Russia contradicts Moscow's version, which only claimed that the attackers had tried to reach Ukraine.

Moscow still blames kyiv

On Tuesday, the head of Russian secret services, Alexander Bortnikov, accused Ukraine and the West of having facilitated the attack near Moscow, claimed by the jihadist group Islamic State, with Russia insisting on a link between kyiv and the alleged attackers.

“We believe that the action was prepared both by radical Islamists themselves and, of course, facilitated by Western secret services and that the Ukrainian secret services themselves are directly involved,” Alexander Bortnikov said, quoted by Russian media.

He also affirmed that the alleged attackers, arrested on Saturday, were “expected” in Ukraine to be welcomed “as heroes”.

Asked if the United States, the United Kingdom and Ukraine were involved, Alexander Bortnikov replied: “I think that is the case.

» However, he added that “the sponsor” had “not yet been identified”.

The Ukrainian authorities, supported by Washington, have repeatedly said that they had nothing to do with this attack which left 139 dead, the deadliest in twenty years in Russia and the worst claimed by ISIS on the ground European.

On Monday, Vladimir Putin admitted for the first time, three days after the events and the IS claim, that the alleged attackers were “radical Islamists”, while continuing to point the finger at Ukraine.

“Sick and cynical creature”

After Moscow's accusations, the Ukrainian head of state Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday described his Russian counterpart as a "sick and cynical creature", while one of his advisers, Mykhaïlo Podoliak, denounced the next day the Russian "absurdities". .

The head of Russian diplomacy, Sergei Lavrov, for his part rejected on Tuesday any help from Interpol because the organization would insist on "the theory favorable to the West according to which ISIS would have committed the attack and Ukraine 'wouldn't have anything to do with it.'

Eight suspects in custody

Russian authorities announced on Saturday the arrest of the four suspected attackers, who are from Tajikistan, a former Soviet republic in Central Asia.

Three other suspects, one of whom has Russian nationality, were taken into custody on Monday.

An eighth person, from Kyrgyzstan, was placed in pre-trial detention on Tuesday, Russian justice announced.

During the hearing, this man claimed, according to Ria Novosti, that he did not know the intentions of the individuals to whom he had rented an apartment after contact via a classified ads site.

The five former Soviet republics in the region, led by Tajikistan, saw thousands of their citizens leave for Syria or Iraq in the 2010s.

Furthermore, the FSB said on Tuesday that a Russian national belonging to a group allied to Ukraine and who was planning an attack had been killed in the explosion of his bomb at the time of his arrest in the Samara (Volga) region. .

The intelligence services did not specify whether the explosion was deliberately set off or accidental.

The FSB assured that it had thus avoided a “terrorist act” that this member of the Ukraine-based organization “Russian Volunteer Corps” which is fighting Russian forces, is accused of having prepared against a humanitarian aid collection point.

Source: leparis

All news articles on 2024-03-26

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