Suicide bomber kills 20,wounds 138 in Russia Ingushetia

NAZRAN, Russia, (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed  20 people and wounded 138 in Russia’s Ingushetia region yesterday, turning a simmering Islamist insurgency there into the  biggest test of Kremlin control of its southern flank.

“Every day something happens on (Ingushetia’s)…territory,”  President Dmitry Medvedev told senior officials in the southern  city of Astrakhan. “And they are all links in the same chain,  all consequences of terrorist activity.”

Medvedev sacked Ingushetia’s interior minister after the  bombing, the latest in a string of assaults, linked by analysts  to Islamist insurgents, against police and politicians in  Russia’s poorest region, bordering Chechnya.
The bomb, packed into a yellow truck, exploded at the gates  of the main police station in Nazran, Ingushetia’s largest city,  as officers lined up at the start of their day.

Thick smoke billowed from the remains of the police station  and firemen fought flames near the mangled gate of the compound.  Dozens of people sifted through rubble and wrecked cars were  scattered around a 4-metre (13 ft) wide crater.
“This act of terror could have been averted,” Medvedev said.

Ingush leader Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, who is recovering after a  suicide bomb attack in June, said yesterday’s blast was aimed at  destabilising the region, which has overtaken Chechnya as  Russia’s main area of violence in its south.

“This is a big blow to the Kremlin,” said Tatyana Lokshina,  an activist with Human Rights Watch (HRW) who travels regularly  to the region. “The number of attacks has been growing for a  while, but I can’t remember one as brazen as this.”

Rebellion in the northern Caucasus, where the Kremlin has  fought two wars to subdue Chechen separatists, poses an implicit  threat to the wider fabric of Russia. The Federation spans 11  time zones from the Baltic to the Pacific and embraces dozens of  ethnic groups with their own cultural sensitivities.

The European Union, in a statement by the current Swedish  presidency, said it condemned the “brutal act”.
The attack was the bloodiest in Ingushetia since 2004 when  92 people were killed when Chechen rebels took over the centre  of Nazran, said Kaloi Akhilgov, a spokesman for Yevkurov.

It was the biggest death toll from an attack in the North  Caucasus since a similar attack on the city of Nalchik in 2005  in the nearby Kabardino-Balkaria region. No one claimed responsibility for Monday’s attack.

Web site www.kavkazcenter.com, which has links to the  Chechen separatist movement, praised the attack by calling the  suicide bomber a “shakhid”, a word Islamist fighters use to  describe martyrs.

Relatives crowded around a hand-written list of the dead at  a local hospital and authorities declared three days of  mourning.
Moscow sent an aeroplane with doctors aboard and evacuated  the severely injured to the Russian southern city of Vladikavkaz  for immediate treatment, the emergencies ministry said.