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Memorial Day: Tragic Terrorist Attacks in Russia's Modern History (PHOTOS)

© Sputnik / Maksim Blinov / Go to the mediabankA 'Young Guard' movement activist is laying flowers to memorial to victims of terrorist attack on the Dubrovka Theater Center in Moscow
A 'Young Guard' movement activist is laying flowers to memorial to victims of terrorist attack on the Dubrovka Theater Center in Moscow - Sputnik International
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In the last decade, Russia has been hit with some of the most terrible terrorist attacks ever. On September 3, the nation mourns their dead and holds memorial services in different cities where terrorist attacks claimed hundreds of innocent civilian lives.

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On September 3, Russians pay homage to thousands of compatriots who died at the hands of terrorists over the last decade. Attacks in the Dubrovka theater center, Budyonnovsk and Pervomaysky, house explosions in Moscow, Buynaksk and Volgodonsk, as well as hundreds of other terrorist attacks have left an imprint on Russia’s modern history.

In particular, Russia commemorates the tragic events that took place in the city of Beslan on September 1-3, 2004, when over 300 people, mostly women and children, died as a result of an unprecedentedly cruel terrorist attack.

On the anniversary of this tragic event, a minute of silence is held across the country, there are memorial concerts, people gather to light candles and send 334 white balloons into the sky in memory of the victims who died that day.

Despite the terrible ordeals that Russians have faced at the hands of the terrorists, western media has on a number of occasions failed to bring to light the grief suffered as a result.

The attacks occurring in the Western world are highlighted more intensely, whereas, violence in Russia is not deemed to be as tragic and hence is left aside. The truth is that Russia has been dealing with terrorism for much longer than other countries.

In memory of all the victims and in support of their families who have lost their loved ones, Sputnik presents a memory of the attacks that shook this nation to its core. We remember!

The City of Angels: School #1 in Beslan

September 1 is a day when new pupils in all of Russia come to their schools to start the school year. Their families come along with the pupils to present flowers to teachers. It is a day of celebration all across the country.

However, September 1, 2004, turned into a day of tragedy beyond human comprehension in the North Ossetian town of Beslan when militants seized more than 1,100 students, their families and teachers in school №1.

The hostages were rounded up into the school gym and kept there for three days without food and water.

© Sputnik / Natalya Lvova / Go to the mediabankSchool No.1 in Beslan that was seized by terrorists. (File)
School No.1 in Beslan that was seized by terrorists. (File) - Sputnik International
School No.1 in Beslan that was seized by terrorists. (File)

On September 2, after negotiations with the former Head of Ingushetia, Ruslan Aushev released 25 women and children. On September 3, shooting and explosions started inside the school and security officials were forced to begin their assault operation.

Most of the hostages were released but 334 people were killed, including 186 children. More than 800 people were injured. The militants were killed; one survivor was sentenced to death, instead of receiving life imprisonment. The responsibility for the attack was claimed by the international terrorist Shamil Basayev (killed in 2006).

Twelve years have passed since Beslan tragedy took place on September 1, 2004.  However, in these 12 years, some Western media have tried to justify the actions of the terrorists that day, even calling them rebels and guerrillas.

In conversation with Sputnik Italia, Ennio Bordato an honorary citizen of Beslan and the President of Help Us Save the Children Association [Aiutateci a salvare i bambini] described why it is important to remember this fateful day.

“On September 4, 2004 we arrived in Moscow and contacted Beslan through a mother of one of the children lying in a hematology unit. Thanks to the authorities of the Autonomous Province of Trento [Provincia autonoma di Trento] we started our first project. We brought 33 children and 30 adults for two months to Italy from Beslan,” Bortado said.

He further noted, “A difficult episode started from 2005 to 2010 when a team of psychologists from the University of Padua (Università di Padova) started working in Beslan. This project of psychological assistance ended in the release of 1000 DVDs with recommendations to overcome post-traumatic stress disorder.”

Bortado added that the association is still active in Belsan as it is in touch with the city administration and in particular with the victims who came to Trento.

“I believe that this terrible event should be seen with a broader view, to understand its full significance. What happened in Beslan was the first step to what is now called Daesh. This was an attempt to force Muslims to fight against Christians and to perceive Russia as the main enemy,” the association president said.

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He added that the terrorist attack in Beslan was an attempt to undermine peaceful coexistence in the country, which is a troubled region. Historically, ethnically and from a religious point of view, the Caucasus region has always been very complex area.

Talking about why in the west, the tragedy that occurred in Beslan has been forgotten despite the fact that innocent children were killed; Bordato said, “Because the target was Russia.”

“Just like today they keep saying that in Syria it is the moderate terrorists, it was similar back then, when the tragedy was presented in such a way that those who killed the children in that school were not to be blamed.”

He spoke about how in the west there are still victims of “Series A” and “Series B”.

“In the West, the press still bows before an international authority and we continue to say that, in fact, victims of Russian are not very important, only our victims are important. This is our big mistake, for which we will pay in the future,” Bordato concluded.

Moscow Theatre Hostage Crisis on Dubrovka

October 23, 2002, was just a regular night for the culture center on Dubrovka Street; actors were performing part one of the acclaimed musical Nord-Ost for over 900 audience members. Suddenly, a group of armed militants broke inside, took everyone hostage and mined the building.

© AFP 2023 / ALEXANDER NEMENOVRelatives and friends of Arseny Kurilenko (portrait at R), 13, a member of the cast of the Nord-Ost show mourn during his funeral in Moscow, 30 October 2002. (File)
Relatives and friends of Arseny Kurilenko (portrait at R), 13, a member of the cast of the Nord-Ost show mourn during his funeral in Moscow, 30 October 2002. (File) - Sputnik International
Relatives and friends of Arseny Kurilenko (portrait at R), 13, a member of the cast of the Nord-Ost show mourn during his funeral in Moscow, 30 October 2002. (File)

Around 40 terrorists flooded the hall on both levels. The hooded men and women would later demand the Russian government withdraw forces from its southern republic of Chechnya, threatening to kill 10 hostages for every dead militant.

On the morning of October 26, Special Forces began an assault on the theatre using special unidentified gas that rendered everyone unconscious and killing others. Leader of the terrorists Movsar Barayev and most of his band were killed, while three were arrested. 130 hostages died that day. Shamil Basayev took responsibility for the attack.

Flight Interrupted

In 2004, two domestic Russian aircraft were bombed on August 24.

Both aircraft had flown out of Domodedovo International Airport in Moscow and carried a combined total of 90 people, none of whom survived.

Siberia Airlines Tu-154 was bound for Sochi while the Tu-134 belonging to Volga – Aviaexpress was bound for Volgograd. The explosions took place on board the aircraft with a difference of a minute at 22:54 and 22:55.

© Sputnik / Sergey Venyavsky / Go to the mediabankAt the site of a Tu-154 crash in the village of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, 138 kilometers away from Rostov-on-Don. The aircraft crashed on August 24, 2004. (File)
At the site of a Tu-154 crash in the village of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, 138 kilometers away from Rostov-on-Don. The aircraft crashed on August 24, 2004. (File) - Sputnik International
At the site of a Tu-154 crash in the village of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, 138 kilometers away from Rostov-on-Don. The aircraft crashed on August 24, 2004. (File)

The subsequent investigation found that the bombs were triggered by two female Chechen suicide bombers.

Bomb Blasts in Moscow Metro 2004

On February 6, 2004, a blast tore apart a train car in the Moscow metro killing 41 and wounding over 250 others.

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The blast ripped apart the metro train car during morning rush hour as the train was traveling from Paveletskaya station to Avtozavodskaya station, southwest of the city center, around 8:40 a.m.

On March 29, 2010 two women suicide bombers carried out terrorist attacks at Lubyanka metro station and Park Kultury station during the morning rush hour. At least 40 people were killed, and over 100 injured.

Russian officials called the incident “the deadliest and most sophisticated terrorist attack in the Russian capital in six years” a reference to the Avtozavodskaya and Rizhskaya bombings in 2004. At the time of the attacks, an estimated 500,000 people were commuting through Moscow's metro system.

© Sputnik / Vladimir Pesnya / Go to the mediabankFlowers and candles in memory of people killed during the March 29, 2010 terrorist attacks at Moscow's Park Kultury metro station, part of the Sokolnicheskaya Line.
Flowers and candles in memory of people killed during the March 29, 2010 terrorist attacks at Moscow's Park Kultury metro station, part of the Sokolnicheskaya Line. - Sputnik International
Flowers and candles in memory of people killed during the March 29, 2010 terrorist attacks at Moscow's Park Kultury metro station, part of the Sokolnicheskaya Line.

Initial investigation indicated that the bombings were perpetrated by the militant Islamist Caucasus Emirate group. On March 31, Caucasus Emirate leader Doku Umarov claimed responsibility for ordering the attacks in a video released on the internet. He was eliminated in 2013.

Two more terrorist attacks occurred in the vicinity of Moscow metro stations. On August 8, 2000, in the underpass at Pushkin Square an explosive device was detonated killing 13 people and injuring 118.

On August 31, 2004, a female suicide bomber blew herself up near Rizhskaya metro station killing 10 people and wounding 50 others.

Bloody September of 1999

In September 1999, Russia was shaken by whole series of terrorist acts.

On September 4, in Daegstan’s Buinaksk, near a five-story house on Levanevskogo street a GAZ-52 truck was blown up. Inside of it was 2,700 kg of explosive aluminum powder and ammonium nitrate.

The targeted building was a residence for the families of servicemen of the 136th Motorized Brigade of the Russian Ministry of Defense.

In the aftermath, 58 died people and 146 were wounded. Later six more people died from injuries.

On September 8, of the same year, there was an explosion on Guryanov Street. The device exploded on the ground floor of a nine-story apartment building, killing 92 people and wounding 264.

© Sputnik / Dmitry Korobeinikov / Go to the mediabankDebris removed on the site of the terrorist act in Guryanov Street, Moscow, that killed 100 people and injured 690. (File)
Debris removed on the site of the terrorist act in Guryanov Street, Moscow, that killed 100 people and injured 690. (File) - Sputnik International
Debris removed on the site of the terrorist act in Guryanov Street, Moscow, that killed 100 people and injured 690. (File)

On September 13, an explosion hit Moscow's Kashira Highway where a massive amount TNT was detonated in the basement of an 8-storey residential building, killing 124 people and injuring 9.

On September 16, in the city of Volgodonsk, Rostov region a 1500kg bomb was detonated in a GAZ-53 truck near a nine-storey building on the Octaborskaya highway,. As a result, part of the facade collapsed completely. A fire broke out on some of the floors killing 19 people, and wounding 310.

Nevsky Express 2009

The first attempt to destroy the Nevsky Express was launched on August 13, 2007. The locomotive and 12 cars were derailed injuring about 60 people. On November 27, 2009 there was a second terrorist attack on the 285 km of the Octoborskaya Railway.

The last three cars were derailed killing 28 people and injuring more than 90.

© Sputnik / Iliya Pitalev / Go to the mediabankThe crash site of the Nevsky Express passenger train with several cars derailed in Tver Region on its way from Moscow to St Petersburg (File)
The crash site of the Nevsky Express passenger train with several cars derailed in Tver Region on its way from Moscow to St Petersburg (File) - Sputnik International
The crash site of the Nevsky Express passenger train with several cars derailed in Tver Region on its way from Moscow to St Petersburg (File)

Volgograd Attacks December 2013

On the eve of New Year two terrorist attacks occurred in Volgorgrad. On December 29, 2013, a suicide bomber tried to enter a railway station but was stopped by police sergeant, Dmitry Makovkin.

The suicide bomber detonated the bomb at a security check near the entrance area. At least 18 people were killed, 45 were wounded. Dmitry Makovkin, who prevented the terrorist from going inside the waiting area of the train station, was posthumously awarded the Order of Courage.

The next day, December 30, there was another terrorist bomber on the bus in the Dzerzhinsky district of the city. The attack killed 16 people and injured 25 others.

© Sputnik / Go to the mediabankAgents of law enforcement and operative services work at the site of an explosion on a trolleybus near Kachinsky Market in Volgograd. (File)
Agents of law enforcement and operative services work at the site of an explosion on a trolleybus near Kachinsky Market in Volgograd. (File) - Sputnik International
Agents of law enforcement and operative services work at the site of an explosion on a trolleybus near Kachinsky Market in Volgograd. (File)

Domodedovo Airport Attack 2011

On January 24, 2011, Domodedovo International Airport, Moscow, was hit by a suicide bomber. The explosion took place in the international arrival hall killing 38 people and injuring 116.

Russia's Federal Investigative Committee later identified the suicide bomber as a 20-year-old from the North Caucasus and said that the attack was aimed "first and foremost" at foreign citizens.

© Sputnik / Alexey Kudenko / Go to the mediabankFlowers in the Domodedovo arrival lounge to commemorate the victims of the act of terrorism on January 24. (File)
Flowers in the Domodedovo arrival lounge to commemorate the victims of the act of terrorism on January 24. (File) - Sputnik International
Flowers in the Domodedovo arrival lounge to commemorate the victims of the act of terrorism on January 24. (File)

Russian Plane A321 in Sinai, Egypt

Last year, hundreds of Russian citizens died in a terrorist attack carried out against a Russian jet in Egypt's skies. On October 31, 2015, the Russian A321 plane crashed in the Sinai desert while flying from the resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg. All 224 people on board died in what has become the largest civil aviation disaster in Russian history.

© REUTERS / Mohamed Abd El GhanyA flower is seen near debris at the crash site of a Russian airliner in al-Hasanah area in El Arish city, north Egypt, November 1, 2015. (File)
A flower is seen near debris at the crash site of a Russian airliner in al-Hasanah area in El Arish city, north Egypt, November 1, 2015. (File) - Sputnik International
A flower is seen near debris at the crash site of a Russian airliner in al-Hasanah area in El Arish city, north Egypt, November 1, 2015. (File)

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said the tragedy was the result of a terrorist attack. Daesh which is banned in Russia and many other countries, claimed responsibility for the plane's downing.

Russia, like other countries around the world, has been exposed to the risk of becoming a potential recruiting ground for radical Islamist networks. The Russian Interior Ministry said last December that up to 2,000 Russian nationals were estimated to be involved in Daesh-related military activities.

On September 30, 2015, Russia launched its anti-terrorist mission in Syria at President Bashar Assad’s request.

Terrorism is a world-wide phenomenon that has gripped the 21st world in its deadly clutches. Solidarity and support amongst nations is the only way to battle this evil.

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