For anyone who is not aware of the numerous name changes under Soviet rule Volgograd is Stalingrad, which was the battle that turned the tide during WW11.
Bombs, blood and death return to Volgograd
Bombs, blood and death return to Volgograd
The
southern Russian city of Volgograd was in a state of siege as troops
patrolled the streets and its people struggled to come to terms with
two suicide bombings in 24 hours.
1
January, 2014
At
least 14 people were killed and 28 injured, three critically, when
the second blast ripped through a packed trolleybus near a market in
Volgograd's Dzerzhinsk district in the morning rush hour local time.
Fatima
Samukhvalova was chatting to other vendors beside her flower stall
when the bomber struck.
"First
we heard a thud, then the explosion, and then a shock wave that
knocked my colleague off her feet. We ran down the road and found a
bus completely destroyed. It was horrible to look at. There were bits
of people, dead people, lots of blood," she said.
She
described how market workers had joined conscript soldiers to help as
many survivors as possible before the emergency services arrived.
"The
soldiers were excellent. They did everything properly and calmly.
"I
helped one woman. No one knows why they target Volgograd. We're
peaceful people here, and all nationalities live together peacefully.
Everyone helped - Russians, Azerbaijainis, Moldovans. We're all
afraid."
Survivors
included a 3-month-old girl, Vika Tokunova, apparently saved from the
blast by the blanket in which her mother and grandmother had wrapped
her as they took her for a medical check.
Both
women were killed, according to the website Lifenews, and the baby
was said to be in a serious condition with a fractured skull and lung
trauma.
While
the people of Volgograd struggled to comprehend why their city was
being targeted by terrorists, Russian authorities scrambled to make
sense of a series of attacks that their intelligence services had
failed to predict.
The
blast came only a day after a suicide bomber killed 17 people and
injured more than 40 at the city's main railway station and followed
another suicide bus bomb in October that killed at least six.
The
Investigative Committee, Russia's equivalent of the FBI, said the bus
bombing was the work of a man whose remains were being tested in an
attempt to establish his identity.
Meanwhile,
reports in the Russian press named the man behind the railway station
blast as Pavel Pechenkin, who lived in the republic of Mari El, 645km
east of Moscow and converted to Islam last year.
Pechenkin's
father, Nikolai, has already given a DNA sample to aid
identification, the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper reported.
Pechenkin,
a former paramedic, was reported to have adopted the Muslim name
Ansar Ar-Rusi in 2012 and to have left home soon afterwards.
He
told his parents he was going to stay with his younger brother in
Moscow, but they later learned he had gone to Dagestan, the North
Caucasus republic at the heart of an Islamist insurgency.
Mari
El, which previously has not been connected with the insurgency
1610km away, has a population of 700,000, of whom just 6 per cent are
Muslim.
Russian
media had initially reported that the station bomber was a
26-year-old woman who had twice been married to insurgent fighters,
each in turn killed by special forces. But later the Investigative
Committee said that the suspect was a male of "Slavic"
appearance who carried explosives in a rucksack.
President
Vladimir Putin summoned the heads of both the Interior Ministry and
the FSB, the domestic security service that succeeded the KGB, to the
Kremlin before sending Alexander Bortnikov, the FSB chief, to
Volgograd to take control of the investigation.
Putin
ordered security to be tightened across Russia and later met Dmitry
Medvedev, the Prime Minister, to discuss "all questions
connected with providing medical help, financial assistance and other
forms of support for the injured and families of those killed in the
terror attacks in Volgograd".
Russia's
Foreign Ministry likened the two suicide bombings to attacks in the
US, Syria and other countries and called for solidarity against what
it said was an attempt by terrorists to open "another front".
A statement said: "We will not retreat and will continue our
consistent fight against an insidious enemy that can only be defeated
together."
While
no group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, they follow a
July call by Doku Umarov, a Chechen insurgent leader, for his
followers to do their utmost to disrupt the Winter Olympics - due to
begin in the Russian resort of Sochi, 640km from Volgograd, in
February.
The
extent of Umarov's authority is disputed and experts have suggested
that the lack of a claim of responsibility suggests that his
organisation has been degraded and the insurgency now operates in
small cells hard for Russian security forces to penetrate.
The
series of attacks is grimly reminiscent of the build-up to terrorist
"spectaculars" in the mid-2000s, including the Beslan
School siege, in which more than 300 people died, 180 of them
children.
Then
suicide bombers had blown up two airliners in mid-air a week before
they seized the school on September 1, 2004, in what security experts
now describe as an attempt to divert the security services' attention
ahead of the main attack.
As
authorities closed all Volgograd's shopping centres and other
potential terrorist targets and 4000 Interior Ministry troops and
hundreds of volunteers flooded the streets, it was difficult to shake
the feeling that a state of war had returned.
'Fight
terrorists until full elimination': Putin changes New Year address
after Volgograd terror attacks
The
deadly suicide attacks in Volgograd forced Vladimir Putin to make
changes to his traditional New Year address, with the Russian
President promising to wage “a confident, tough and consistent”
war on terror until total victory.
RT,
31
December, 2013
“The
inhumane terrorist acts in Volgograd” were
among the biggest challenges Russia faced in 2013, the Putin said in
his address to the nation, broadcast minutes before the New
Year.
“In the time of challenges Russia always stood united and solid,” he stressed.
At least 34 people have lost their lives and over 80 injured in two suicide blasts in Russia’s southern city of Volgograd on December 29 and 30, with the president saying: “We bend our head before the victims of the violent terrorist attacks.”
“We’ll lead a confident, tough and consistent battle against the terrorists until their full elimination,” the President promised.
This year, Putin broke the long-time tradition and gave up on the pre-recorded address to the nation, shot at the Kremlin several days before the New Year.
On December 31, Putin made a surprise visit to Khabarovsk, which contains one of the temporary accommodation centers for those who lost their homes in massive floods hitting the Russian Far East this summer.
“In the time of challenges Russia always stood united and solid,” he stressed.
At least 34 people have lost their lives and over 80 injured in two suicide blasts in Russia’s southern city of Volgograd on December 29 and 30, with the president saying: “We bend our head before the victims of the violent terrorist attacks.”
“We’ll lead a confident, tough and consistent battle against the terrorists until their full elimination,” the President promised.
This year, Putin broke the long-time tradition and gave up on the pre-recorded address to the nation, shot at the Kremlin several days before the New Year.
On December 31, Putin made a surprise visit to Khabarovsk, which contains one of the temporary accommodation centers for those who lost their homes in massive floods hitting the Russian Far East this summer.
The
sudden change of plans resulted in the Russians getting two
presidential addresses as Putin recorded his new speech in
Khabarovsk.
Investigators, police officers and
emergency crews are seen at the site of the suicide bomber attack
near the entrance to the train station in Volgograd (RIA Novosti /
Sergey Braga)
The Khabarovsk address turned out to be three minutes longer than the initial speech, with specifics on the Volgograd blasts and the devastating floods in the Far East added.
“On New Year’s Eve, the President decided to be with those specific people, who survived this unprecedented catastrophe. And here he addresses them with a felicitation,” Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s press-secretary, told ITAR-TASS news agency.
“And this greeting speech has become his New Year address, which means that he, in fact, broke a longstanding tradition,” the spokesman added.
Peskov explained the fact that Kamchatka saw the old address by “a technical blunder” as the footage was not sent there in time.
“My dear friends, this year I’m addressing you with a New Year speech not from the Kremlin as usual, but from the Far East,” Putin said in his new address. “I came here to meet the New Year with those, who with honor and dignity passed the test of nature, but can’t celebrate the holiday in their own homes. Together with them, I congratulate the whole of the country and raise my glass to our people, the health of those, who fought the flood, showing compassion and selfless generosity.”
A policeman watches as a bus,
destroyed in an earlier explosion, is towed away in Volgograd
December 30, 2013 (Reuters / Sergey Karpov)
12,000 homes were flooded in Khabarovsk, Amur and Jewish Autonomous Regions, with over 183,000 people affected by the natural disaster.
“We’ll support all those, who were affected [by the floods],” the President said. “We’ll do everything that was planned – reconstruct and build everything slated to be reconstructed or built.”
But despite the challenges Putin gave a positive assessment of 2013, “our country became somewhat better, more convenient, more prosperous and succeeded in persistently defending its interests in international affairs,” he stressed.
As for Russia’s main tasks in 2014, Putin said that a lot has to be done “in the economy, in improving the lives of people and assuring their safety,” with another important issue on the agenda being “hosting the Olympics and Paralympics at the highest level.”
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