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The
Associated Press
ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia Aug. 2 —
Bomb
Attack Death Toll Rises to 42
Rescuers
on Saturday picked through the rubble of a military hospital destroyed
by a suicide attack the day before, while the death toll rose to 42
and Russian officials said they suspected Chechen rebels were behind
the explosion.
An unidentified attacker rammed a truck packed with explosives through
the gates of the four-story red brick hospital Friday night in the city
of Mozdok in the North Ossetia region, the region's Emergency Situations
Minister Boris Dzgoyev said. He said 98 patients and 21 employees were
inside the building at the time of the explosion.
About 700 rescue workers used sniffer dogs and heavy machinery to search
for more victims and clear the blast site. Officials said they expected
the death toll to rise as the rubble is cleared.
"The search continues for the dead and the wounded who could be remaining
under the debris," Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said as he
surveyed the debris.
Ivanov broke off his summer vacation to travel to the site Saturday
at the request of President Vladimir Putin. He said the act of terrorism
was possible because special military security orders were disobeyed.
He said the chief of the Mozdok military garrison had been suspended
pending an investigation.
Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but Russian officials
said they suspected Chechen rebels were behind it. Suicide bombings
have killed more than 100 people in and near Chechnya and in Moscow
since May.
Russian Deputy Prosecutor General Sergei Fridinsky said that because
military personnel who fought rebels in Chechnya were being treated
at the hospital, "we are inclined to view this crime as an act of
revenge."
"We can definitely say that it is not a question of a criminal dispute,
but a well-planned terrorist act," he said on NTV.
Dzgoyev said many of the patients had been soldiers who recovering from
wounds suffered in Chechnya, where Russia's second war against rebels
in a decade has lasted nearly four years.
Robert Kireyev, a spokesman for the Emergency Situation Ministry in
southern Russia, said 42 people had been confirmed killed by Saturday
evening and 36 bodies had been identified. He said 74
people remained hospitalized, 10 in critical condition.
Soldiers in the region donated blood for the wounded Saturday after
hospital officials warned of serious shortages of medicine and supplies.
Maj. Gen. Nikolai Lityuk, deputy head of the regional Emergency Situations
Ministry, said after the blast that a Kamaz truck broke through the
hospital gates, drove past some tents, pulled up at the reception office
and exploded, leaving a crater 26 feet across and 10 feet deep.
Lityuk said preliminary information indicated one person was in the
truck during the attack, the latest deadly assault aimed at the Russian
military in and around Chechnya and another bloody blow to the Kremlin's
efforts to bring order in the region.
Mozdok is the headquarters for Russian forces fighting in Chechnya and
has been targeted by attackers before. In June, a female suicide attacker
detonated a bomb near a bus carrying soldiers and civilians to work
at a military airfield near Mozdok, killing at least 16 people.
Putin expressed condolences to relatives of the victims, ordered an
investigation and met with security officials to discuss the attack,
the Kremlin said.
Russian forces withdrew from Chechnya following a 1994-1996 war that
left separatists in charge, but returned in 1999 after Chechnya-based
militants invaded a neighboring region and after the Kremlin also blamed
rebels for apartment-building bombings that killed about 300 people.
In May in Chechnya, a truck-bomb attack similar to Friday's blast killed
60 people and a woman blew herself up at a religious ceremony, killing
at least 18. Last month, a double suicide bombing at a rock concert
in Moscow killed 15 bystanders.
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