Belarus hunts for culprits as Minsk metro blast toll hits 12
POLICE in Belarus carried out spot checks on roads and at stations and airports yesterday after a bomb blast tore through a crowded metro station in the capital Minsk on Monday evening, killing at least 12 people.
As police hunted those responsible for what appeared to have been a bomb activated by remote control, a top official from the prosecutor general's office described the attack as an act of "terrorism," unprecedented in Belarus.
The former Soviet state of 10 million people is heavily policed and, though the bombing resembled similar attacks in Russia, it has no Islamic insurgency problem and no real history of political violence. President Alexander Lukashenko, who has led Belarus since 1994, said the explosion was an attempt to destabilize the country.
"This is the first time we are encountering such a manifestation of terrorism," Deputy Prosecutor-General Andrei Shved was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency. But he gave no indication of who might have been behind it.
The defense ministry said 204 people were in hospital, 26 of them in a serious condition, after the evening rush-hour blast at Oktyabrskaya station, one of Minsk's busiest underground rail junctions close to the presidential headquarters.
Shved was also quoted as saying several people had been detained in connection with the attack, though it was not clear whether they were real suspects in the affair.
The explosive device, which had been packed with metal ball bearings, nails and bolts and had a strength equivalent to 5-7 kilograms of TNT, had apparently been left under a platform bench. "We are not talking about suicide bombers. In all probability, it was a remote-controlled device," Shved added.
It blew up as a train came into the station and about 300 people were milling around.
Belarus's state security service raised the death toll to 12 after the death of one injured person overnight. Today was declared an official day of mourning.
Lukashenko linked the explosion to a previous unsolved blast in 2008, saying: "I do not rule out that this was a gift from abroad."
Yesterday there was a reduced service running on Minsk's metro network and a heavy police presence at many stations.
People placed flowers and candles at the entry to Oktyabrskaya station in memory of the dead.
As police hunted those responsible for what appeared to have been a bomb activated by remote control, a top official from the prosecutor general's office described the attack as an act of "terrorism," unprecedented in Belarus.
The former Soviet state of 10 million people is heavily policed and, though the bombing resembled similar attacks in Russia, it has no Islamic insurgency problem and no real history of political violence. President Alexander Lukashenko, who has led Belarus since 1994, said the explosion was an attempt to destabilize the country.
"This is the first time we are encountering such a manifestation of terrorism," Deputy Prosecutor-General Andrei Shved was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency. But he gave no indication of who might have been behind it.
The defense ministry said 204 people were in hospital, 26 of them in a serious condition, after the evening rush-hour blast at Oktyabrskaya station, one of Minsk's busiest underground rail junctions close to the presidential headquarters.
Shved was also quoted as saying several people had been detained in connection with the attack, though it was not clear whether they were real suspects in the affair.
The explosive device, which had been packed with metal ball bearings, nails and bolts and had a strength equivalent to 5-7 kilograms of TNT, had apparently been left under a platform bench. "We are not talking about suicide bombers. In all probability, it was a remote-controlled device," Shved added.
It blew up as a train came into the station and about 300 people were milling around.
Belarus's state security service raised the death toll to 12 after the death of one injured person overnight. Today was declared an official day of mourning.
Lukashenko linked the explosion to a previous unsolved blast in 2008, saying: "I do not rule out that this was a gift from abroad."
Yesterday there was a reduced service running on Minsk's metro network and a heavy police presence at many stations.
People placed flowers and candles at the entry to Oktyabrskaya station in memory of the dead.
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