综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

World
Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers'
2010-Mar-31 07:54:19

MOSCOW – Prime Minister Vladimir Putin Tuesday said the culprits behind twin suicide bombings that killed 39 people in Moscow's metro must be scraped "from the bottom of the sewers" and exposed.

Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers'
A fire-fighter and Interior Ministry officers work near the entrance of the Lubyanka metro station in Moscow March 29, 2010. [Agencies]?

The tough talk came a day after the deadliest attack on the Russian capital in six years fueled fears of a broader offensive by rebels based in the North Caucasus and underscored the Kremlin's failure to keep militants in check.

Related readings:
Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers' Moscow mourns, Russian bombing toll rises to 39
Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers' New York beefs up security after Moscow bombings
Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers' Moscow metro line resumes operation after blasts
Putin orders Moscow bombers 'scraped from sewers' Female suicide bombers kill 37 in Moscow metro

Putin told a meeting on transport security that surveillance cameras could not prevent terrorist attacks but might help police identify their organizers.

"In this case, we know they're lying low, but it's a matter of honor for law enforcement bodies to scrape them from the bottom of the sewers and into the daylight," he said.

The colorful language fit Putin's tough image.

In 1999, as he led Moscow into a war against Chechen separatists that sealed his rise to power, he vowed to pursue terrorists everywhere and "rub them out in the outhouse."

Moscow observed a day of mourning Tuesday for the victims of the blasts, which authorities said were set off by female suicide bombers linked to the North Caucasus -- a string of heavily Muslim provinces that includes Chechnya.

Flags flew at half-mast and somber Muscovites -- some sobbing, some crossing themselves -- laid flowers and lit candles at the stations hit by Monday's rush-hour blasts.

Grieving relatives identified victims at central Moscow's Morgue Number Two.

Eyes brimming with tears, an elderly man said his son usually drove to work but had his license confiscated recently.

"So he went by metro and he died," said the man, who identified himself as Vladimir Petrovich, giving his patronymic but not his last name.

PRICKLY PROBLEM

In less earthy terms than Putin, who steered him into the presidency in 2008 and is seen as the dominant partner in Russia's ruling tandem, Medvedev also vowed justice.

"We have destroyed terrorists and will destroy them," he said in televised remarks at a meeting on civil rights.

But he accentuated the hurdles the Kremlin faces in uprooting an Islamic insurgency in the North Caucasus, saying the government must tread carefully in the turbulent region and tackle the root causes.

"People want a normal human life no matter where they live -- in central Russia, the Caucasus or somewhere else," he said. "It's up to federal authorities and the authorities in the Caucasus region to create these conditions."

The war Putin launched in 1999 drove separatists from power in Chechnya, but simmering violence has escalated in the past two years in Chechnya and neighboring Dagestan and Ingushetia.

Rights groups contend that poverty, corruption and abuse of power is fuelling the insurgency.

NERVOUS MOSCOW

In recent years, attacks had been largely limited to the North Caucasus.

With police patrols increased Tuesday, commuters warily entered Moscow's metro system the morning after the blasts on packed trains at the central Lubyanka and Park Kultury stations.

"When I was riding the metro in today, somebody's electronic watch started beeping and I thought, "That's it," said Katya Vankova, a business student.

Memorials were set up at both stations. At Park Kultury, people left red carnations and tied white ribbons to a stand on the platform close to where the bomb went off.

A young woman died of her injuries Tuesday, bringing the death toll to 39, Andrei Seltsovsky, the chief of Moscow's health department, said on state-run Rossiya 24 television.

He said 71 other people were still in hospital, five of them in critical condition. Officials said the bombs that caused the carnage were packed with bolts and iron rods.

[Jump to ]
Nation | Biz | Comment | World | Celebrity | Odds | Sports | Travel | Health
ChinaDaily Mobile News
m.chinadaily.com.cn
To subscribe to China Daily, call 010-64918763 or email to circu@chinadaily.com.cn
横山县| 商洛市| 察隅县| 义马市| 天峻县| 关岭| 临猗县| 桐庐县| 麟游县| 从江县| 禹城市| 繁昌县| 青龙| 乐安县| 西盟| 库尔勒市| 德兴市| 卫辉市| 麻江县| 岳池县| 略阳县| 鹤岗市| 文登市| 安阳县| 冷水江市| 普洱| 河源市| 稷山县| 姚安县| 江油市| 德兴市| 甘泉县| 寻甸| 镇康县| 密云县| 澄迈县| 新昌县| 石台县| 通榆县| 南昌市| 松阳县|