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Post by Admin on Mar 25, 2024 15:50:45 GMT
More Moscow concert attack suspects appear in court Three more suspects in the case of the Moscow concert attack have appeared in court.
Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported investigators had asked for the three men to be taken into custody.
The men have been named as two brothers Dilovar Islomov and Aminchon Islomov, and their father Isroil Islomov.
Dilovar Islomav has been identified as a Russian citizen, the news outlet added.
Four suspects from Tajikistan have already been remanded in custody until at least 22 May before facing trial, Russian authorities have said.
Dalerdzhon Barotovich Mirzoyev, 32, Saidakrami Murodali Rachabalizoda, 30, Shamsidin Fariduni, 25, and Muhammadsobir Fayzov, 19, appeared at the Basmanny district court in Moscow yesterday.
Court officials said Mirzoyev and Rachabalizoda pleaded guilty to the charges.
At least 137 people were killed in the attack on the Piknik rock concert at Crocus City Hall Krasnogorsk on Friday.
A further 154 people were injured, and more than 100 remain in hospital.
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Post by Admin on Mar 25, 2024 20:20:20 GMT
The Basmanny Court of Moscow arrested three more suspects for two months in connection with the terrorist attack in Crocus City Hall. These are Tver residents Isroil Islomov and his two sons Aminchon and Dilovar. All three are suspected of aiding terrorists and face life imprisonment. The day before they were summoned to the Investigative Committee for questioning, and then detained. The trial was held behind closed doors. Dilovar Islomov is a Russian citizen born in 1999. He is the last owner of the white Renault that was used by the suspects in the concert hall attack. He previously worked as a taxi driver; his license was revoked one day on March 23, the day after the terrorist attack. It was issued on February 8, 2024 for five years. Dilovar Islomov was the only driver included in the MTPL insurance policy for the Renault, which was used by the suspects in the terrorist attack. On the day of the terrorist attack, Novaya Gazeta. Europe contacted the former owner of Renault and called his initials, which coincided with the initials of Dilovar Islomov. He said that a week before the events in Crocus City Hall, he sold the car to his wife’s brother and was shocked to see the car in the newsreel from the scene of the terrorist attack. Later, his relatives told reporters that Islomov himself went to the police station to give evidence. After that, contact with him disappeared. He last logged into VKontakte on March 22.
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Post by Admin on Mar 26, 2024 18:08:05 GMT
Senior officials in the Putin administration have repeatedly said that Ukraine and the United States were involved in the attack that killed 139 people at a concert venue on the outskirts of Moscow. Major media outlets under the control of the regime are also intensively broadcasting these claims, and are trying to spread the idea that this is an ``attack against Russia'' that is related to the invasion of Ukraine.
[Photo] "If it's stability or democracy, go for the former." Putin's rock-solid regime, silent citizens
Regarding the incident, the extremist group "Islamic State" (IS) released a video that appears to be an attack. The US government has also criticized IS and denied Ukraine's involvement.
On the 26th, Director Bortnikov of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) told reporters that ``the client has not been identified yet,'' but claimed that ``we have obtained information in advance indicating (Ukraine's) involvement.'' ``The incident was prepared by Islamic extremists themselves, supported by US and European special services, and Ukrainian special services were directly involved.''
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Post by Admin on Mar 27, 2024 22:12:26 GMT
Two of the four Tajik men alleged to have participated in the deadly March 23 terrorist assault on concertgoers at Crocus City Hall on the edge of Moscow probably received instructions for the armed attack when they travelled to Turkey, Russian newspaper Izvestia reported on March 25, quoting an unnamed source.
The other two suspects accused of taking part in the terrorist atrocity, which took the lives of at least 137 people, were recruited on Russian territory, the source was also cited as saying.
Later on March 25, a Turkish security official told Reuters that two of the accused gunmen briefly entered Turkey to renew their Russian residence permits, but were not radicalised in Turkey. They were not subject to any outstanding arrest warrants and so were able to travel freely between Russia and Turkey, the official added.
Russian authorities have identified the four suspects as Dalerjon Mirzoev, Rachabalizod Saidakrami, Shamsudin Fariduni and Muhammadsobir Fayzov. All of them are citizens of Tajikistan, who were working in Russia.
It would not be correct to describe the group of suspects as having made up an organised sleeper terrorist cell in the classic sense, according to another unnamed source quoted by Izvestia. The group was not formed as a cell within the framework of any structure but was put together literally a few weeks prior to the attack with some cash payments made to the perpetrators, the source also reportedly said.
Fariduni confessed during an interrogation that on March 4 he arrived in Russia from Turkey, Izvestia’s source was further reported as saying.
“I listened to a lesson on [social media platform] Telegram, to a preacher. Then the [preacher’s] assistant wrote. He wrote on Telegram, without a last name, without anything. He offered money. Five hundred thousand [Russian rubles, equivalent to around $5,500]. To kill, no matter who,” Fariduni was said to have said in the interrogation.
On February 23, Fariduni posted photos on social media from Istanbul, Izvestia also reported.
“Wahhabi preachers, convicted in absentia and put on the wanted list by Russia—for example, Abdullah Kosteksky and Abu Umar Sasitlinsky—currently live in Turkey. Everything is good [for them] there, they have their own media centre through which they preach,” the newspaper quoted one of its sources as saying.
A branch of the Salafi jihadist Islamic State group—namely Islamic State – Khorasan Province (IS-KP, ISIS-K or Isil-K), nowadays usually described as based in Afghanistan—has claimed responsibility for the brutal terrorist attack, though the Kremlin has declined to comment on the evidence that IS-KP was behind it.
It’s important to note that the hierarchy of IS-KP is loosely arranged. The group is known to have told militants sympathetic to it that it will claim responsibility for any attack carried out on its behalf. IS-KP has also encouraged sympathisers, who are not trained terrorists, to carry out attacks based on their own evaluations and decision-making. Such a reality can make it impossible to identify the instigator of an atrocity.
Difficulties are also caused by media coverage of terror attacks. Much of it is typically misleading and manipulative, with articles swayed by the particular media organ’s ownership, loyalty to a government and/or various other factors.
The involvement of an intelligence service or another entity in a terrorist attack conducted by a group only loosely linked and affiliated to a guiding organisation is always possible.
After the US withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021, jihadist activity in the country and in Central Asia expanded. In the years since, Tajik nationals have taken part in many terrorist attacks, although not in Russia until now. Worth recalling, however, is that last December five Tajik nationals and a Russian citizen from Dagestan were sentenced by a military court in Moscow to prison terms of between 16 and 22 years after being convicted of organising a terrorist group associated with Islamic State and plotting a terrorist attack against the Federal Security Service (FSB) HQ in Moscow. Their defence lawyers insisted that the case was trumped up for political reasons and that the alleged crimes were provoked by security officers, according to a report by Current Time.
Looking more closely at how Turkey is used by jihadists, note that the country has, since 2011 when the Syria and Libya conflicts ignited, turned into a “jihadist hub”. And some jihadist groups, backed by the Turkish government, have fought Russia’s proxies in Syria and Libya.
It is very unlikely, however, that a Turkey connection to the alleged Crocus City Hall terrorists would trigger a radical shift in bilateral relations between Ankara and Moscow. Even while Turkey-backed groups have been fighting the Russian proxies in Syria and Libya in the past decade, relations have remained practicable and strong enough to permit Russia to build Turkey’s first nuclear plant, with the first unit tentatively scheduled to launch later this year.
After the West imposed its Ukraine war-related sanctions on the Kremlin, Turkey emerged as an important transit hub for exports flowing to Russia. Relations between Vladimir Putin and Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are transactional, with both strongmen often indulging in give and take arrangements that raise eyebrows in Europe and the US. There is plenty to gain, and plenty to lose.
Even the downing of a Russian military jet in Syria in 2015 did not cause enduring damage to relations. And both sides saw the assassination of the Russian ambassador to Ankara by a Turkish police officer in 2016 as an attempt by a third party to damage their ties.
It would be somewhat absurd to think that the Erdogan regime engaged with the suspects. Turkey is a three-ring circus for all jihadist organisations from around the world.
It is no surprise that some of the suspects have been to Turkey.
Currently, Turkey, with an official population of 85mn, hosts more than 10mn migrants, including millions of jihadists who have fought in the wider region ranging from Afghanistan to Libya.
The country’s eastern borders are open, while its western borders are closed because of Ankara’s so-called readmission deal on migrants signed with the EU in 2016.
Just like all of the other international jihadist organisations, IS-KP has networks in Turkey. It has in fact carried out two headline attacks in Istanbul. These are the Reina nightclub attack that took place on New Year’s Eve in 2017 and the Ataturk Airport attack of June 2016.
In late January, some alleged IS-KP terrorists carried out an attack inside a Catholic church in Istanbul during Sunday prayer. Only one person was killed. There were reports that the attackers’ gun misfired.
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Post by Admin on Mar 28, 2024 17:54:30 GMT
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