Russian snipers kill Islamist hostage-takers to end prison siege
Russia's security services shot dead four inmates on Friday who had taken hostages at a penal colony, fatally stabbed four of its staff and posted online videos describing themselves as Islamic State militants, officials said.
"Snipers of the special forces of the Russian National Guard in the Volgograd region, with four precise shots, neutralised four prisoners who had taken prison employees hostage. The hostages have been released," state news agency RIA quoted the National Guard as saying.
AMERICANS FREED FROM RUSSIA IN PRISONER SWAP LAND ON US SOIL
The federal prisons service said all four attackers had been "liquidated". It said four of its staff had died of stab wounds, and others had been treated in hospital. A total of eight prison employees and four convicts had been held hostage, it said.
Russian law enforcement officers drive along a road following the seizure of hostages by a group of inmates in the penal colony IK-19, in the town of Surovikino in the Volgograd Region, Russia on August 23, 2024. (REUTERS/Stringer)
In one of the videos posted by the attackers, the victims were seen lying in pools of blood, one of them with his throat slashed. One of the prisoners shouted that they were "mujahideen" of Islamic State.
Other videos showed the attackers pacing about in a prison yard where one of their hostages was slumped in a sitting position, his face covered in blood.
The operation to free the captives took place after President Vladimir Putin, addressing a weekly meeting of his Security Council, said he wanted to hear from the interior minister, FSB security chief and head of the National Guard about the incident.
ISLAMIST ATTACKS
Russia, whose defence and security agencies are heavily focused on its war in Ukraine, has seen a recent upsurge in Islamist militant attacks.
In June, a bloody Islamic State-linked prison uprising took place in the southern region of Rostov, where special forces shot dead six inmates who had taken hostages.
Later that month, at least 20 people were killed in shooting attacks on a church, a synagogue and a police checkpoint in Dagestan, a mainly Muslim region of southern Russia.
In March, Islamic State claimed responsibility for an attack in which gunmen raided the Crocus City concert hall near Moscow, sprayed the audience with automatic weapons fire and set the building ablaze, killing more than 140 people.
The latest incident raised major security questions, just two months after the June prison revolt. It was not clear how the men had managed to acquire knives to attack prison staff and mobile phones to film themselves and post multiple videos online.
In the footage, one of them appeared to have an improvised explosive vest and the others were carrying knives and hammers.
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Their demands were not clear, though in rambling monologues they said that Russia "oppresses Muslims everywhere" and that they had acted "without mercy" in response to alleged mistreatment of Muslim prisoners.
Russian news media said the four were citizens of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, and that three were in jail for drugs offences and the other for murdering someone in a fight.
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