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Posted: 2017-04-04T07:25:16Z | Updated: 2017-04-04T13:26:30Z Officials Identify St. Petersburg Bomber As Kyrgyz-Born Russian Citizen | HuffPost

Officials Identify St. Petersburg Bomber As Kyrgyz-Born Russian Citizen

The blast on board a metro train in St. Petersburg killed 14 people and wounded at least 50.
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The main suspect in a blast in a St Petersburg train carriage that killed 14 people and wounded 50 is a Russian citizen originally from mainly Muslim Kyrgyzstan, authorities there said on Tuesday.

The perpetrator had radical Islamist links, Russian media cited law enforcement officials as saying, raising the possibility the attack could have been inspired by Islamic State, which has not struck a major city in Russia before.

There has been no official confirmation or claim of responsibility. The Kyrgyz GKNB security service identified the suspect as Akbarzhon Jalilov, born in the city of Osh in 1995, but provided no other details.

The explosion on Tuesday in the middle of the afternoon occurred when the train was in a tunnel deep underground, amplifying the force of the blast. The carriage door was blown off, and witnesses described seeing injured passengers with bloodied and blackened bodies.

State investigative authorities said fragments of the body of the suspect had been found among the dead, indicating that he was a suicide bomber.

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A still image of suspect Akbarzhon Jalilov walking at St Petersburg's metro station is shown in this police handout photo obtained by 5th Channel Russia April 4, 2017.
Handout/Reuters

 IS, now under attack by all sides in Syria’s multi-faceted war, has repeatedly threatened revenge and been linked to recent bombings elsewhere in Europe.

If it is confirmed that the metro bomber was linked to radical Islamists, it could provoke anger among some Russians at Moscow’s decision to intervene in Syria, a year before an election which President Vladimir Putin is expected to win.

The National Anti-Terrorist Committee said on Monday an explosive device had been found at another station, hidden in a fire extinguisher, but it had been defused. It was unclear who had placed that device and no arrests have been made.

Russia has been on alert against attacks in reprisal for its military intervention in Syria, where Moscow’s forces have been supporting troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad against Western-backed armed groups as well as the hardline Islamic State (IS) which grew out of the conflict.

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Suspect Akbarzhon Jalilov is shown in this police handout photo, obtained by 5th Channel, Russia April 4, 2017.
Handout/Reuters

 PREVIOUS BOMBING

Officials said they were treating the blast as an act of terrorism, but there was no official confirmation of any link to Islamist radicals.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said it was cynical to say the bombing in St Petersburg was revenge for Russia’s role in Syria. He said the attack showed that Moscow needed to press on with its fight against global terrorism.

Russian officials said they did not want to reveal the suspect’s identity. But a picture was starting to emerge on Tuesday of the man named by Kyrgyz authorities.

A page on social media site VKontakte, the Russian equivalent of Facebook , belonging to someone with the same name and year of birth as Jalilov, included photos of him relaxing with friends in a bar, smoking from a hookah pipe. He was dressed in jackets and a baseball cap, and showed no outward sign of any religious affiliation.

A Reuters reporter visited a house in Osh, southern Kyrgyzstan, which neighbors said was the family home of Jalilov. The home, a modest but well-maintained one-storey brick building, was empty.

Neighbors said Jalilov was from a family of ethnic Uzbeks, and that while they knew his parents they had not seen the young man for years. They said his father worked as a panel-beater in a car repair shop.

Osh is part of the Fergana Valley, a fertile strip of land that straddles Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan which is mainly populated by ethnic Uzbeks. It has a tradition of Islamist radicalism and hundreds of people have set out from the area to join Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

A blast at a nightclub in Istanbul on New Year’s Eve that killed 39 people involved a suspect from the same part of central Asia. The bomber in that attack said he had been acting under the direction of IS militants in Syria.

Two acquaintances of Jalilov’s, contacted by Reuters via social media, said he moved to St Petersburg several years ago. One of the acquaintances said he had worked with Jalilov in a chain of sushi restaurants in the city between late 2012 and late 2013. The second said he had seen Jalilov in the crowd at sambo matches in St Petersburg.

Jalilov has been registered at an apartment in the north of St Petersburg since 2011, according to a source in the Russian authorities, and he has a Daewoo Nexia car registered in his name.

The apartment is in a brand new 16-storey building with its own security guards and a gated garden, and jewelry shops, a wine store and a bank on the ground floor.

The head of the local apartment-owners cooperative, Lyudmila Morozova, told Reuters the owner of the apartment was renting it out to tenants, but she said she did not know if Jalilov was one of the tenants. She said that state investigators had visited the apartment on Monday evening.

PUTIN VISIT “NOTEWORTHY”

Russia’s health minister Veronika Skvortsova said on Tuesday that the death toll from the blast, which hit at 2:40 p.m. (1140 GMT), had risen to 14, with 50 wounded.

St Petersburg television showed footage of the corpse of a bearded man they said was the perpetrator. The man resembled footage of a man captured on closed circuit television identified by Russian media as a suspect.

“It has been ascertained that an explosive device could have been detonated by a man, fragments of whose body were found in the third carriage of the train,” Russia’s state investigative committee said in a statement.

“The man has been identified but his identity will not be disclosed for now in the interests of the investigation,” the statement added.

Passengers were seen hammering at the windows of one closed carriage after the train pulled into the station. Russian TV said many suffered lacerations from glass shards and metal.

President Putin, who was visiting St Petersburg at the time of the blast, went to the site late on Monday.

The Kremlin said it was “noteworthy” that Putin had been in the city. It did not elaborate, but said such attacks on Russia were a challenge for every citizen, including the president.

Two years ago, Islamic State said it had brought down a plane carrying Russian tourists home from a Red Sea resort. All 224 people on board the flight were killed.

Monday’s blast raised security fears beyond Russian frontiers. France, which has itself suffered a series of attacks, announced additional security measures in Paris.

Russian officials received a warning of a possible second attack at the same Sennaya Ploshchad metro station on Tuesday but that alert was later lifted and the station reopened.

(Additional reporting by Svetlana Reiter, Katya Golubkova, Polina Nikolskaya, Sujata Rao, Alexander Winning and Maria Tsvetkova, writing by Philippa Fletcher; editing by Christian Lowe and Sonya Hepinstall)

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Before You Go

Metro Explosion In St. Petersburg, Russia
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Russian president Vladimir Putin puts flowers down outside Tekhnologicheskiy Institut metro station in St. Petersburg, Russia, April 3, 2017. (credit:Grigory Dukor / Reuters)
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A man leaves a candle in memory of victims of a blast in St.Petersburg metro, at Tekhnologicheskiy metro station in St. Petersburg, Russia, April 4, 2017. (credit:Grigory Dukor / Reuters)
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People bring flowers to the monument dedicated to Hero-City Leningrad in the alley of hero-cities to commemorate victims of bombing on Saint Petersburg metro on April 4, 2017 in Moscow, Russia. (credit:Kommersant Photo via Getty Images)
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People lay flowers at Tekhnologichesky institute subway station in St Petersburg, Russia on April 4, 2017. (credit:NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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People bring flowers to the monument dedicated to Hero-City Leningrad in the alley of hero-cities to commemorate victims of bombing on Saint Petersburg metro on April 4, 2017 in Moscow, Russia. (credit:Kommersant Photo via Getty Images)
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The Russian national flag flies at half-mast on top of Saint Petersburg's Legislative Assembly on April 4, 2017. (credit:OLGA MALTSEVA via Getty Images)
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A woman places flowers outside Tekhnologicheskiy Institut metro station in St. Petersburg, Russia, April 3, 2017. (credit:Grigory Dukor / Reuters)
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Fire fighters, a helicopter and emergency service vehicles work near the St. Petersburg metro. (credit:Peter Kovalev via Getty Images)
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Fire fighters at the entrance to Sennaya Ploshchad station of the St Petersburg metro in the aftermath of an explosion. (credit:Sergei Konkov via Getty Images)
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An injured person is helped by emergency services outside Sennaya Ploshchad metro station. (credit:Stringer / Reuters)
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Emergency services direct pedestrians outside Sennaya Ploshchad metro station. (credit:Stringer / Reuters)
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An injured person is helped by emergency services outside Sennaya Ploshchad metro station. (credit:Stringer / Reuters)
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An injured person is helped by emergency services outside Sennaya Ploshchad metro station. (credit:Stringer / Reuters)
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St Petersburg Underground staff member looks outside at the Sennaya Ploshchad station. (credit:Sergei Konkov via Getty Images)
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People wait near the area after an explosion at a subway station in St Petersburg, Russia. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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Police officers take security measures and people wait near the area near the metro station. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)