MOSCOW –
Two female suicide bombers known as “black widows” blew themselves up in Moscow’s busy metro during morning rush hour killing at least 35 people, according to the Russian authorities.
wounding 38, the city's mayor and other officials said. Emergency Ministry spokeswoman Svetlana Chumikova
said 23 people were killed in an explosion shortly before 8 a.m. at the
Lubyanka station in central Moscow. The station is underneath the
building that houses the main offices of the Federal Security Service,
or FSB, the KGB's main successor agency.
A second explosion hit the Park Kultury station about
45 minutes later. Chumikova said at least 12 were dead there. The
ministry later said 38 people were injured.
Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov said both explosions were
believed to have been set off on the trains.
"The first data that the FSB has given us is that
there were two female suicide bombers," Luzhkov told reporters at the
Park Kultury site..
The blasts practically paralyzed movement in the city center as emergency
vehicles sped to the stations.
In the Park Kultury blast, the bomber was wearing a
belt packed with plastic explosive and set it off as the train's doors
opened, said Vladimir Markin, a spokesman for Russia's top
investigative body. The woman has not been identified, he told
reporters.
The last confirmed terrorist attack in Moscow was in August
2004, when a suicide bomber blew herself up outside a city subway
station, killing 10 people.
Responsibility for that blast was claimed by Chechen rebels and
suspicion in Monday's explosions is likely to focus on them and other
separatist groups in the restive North Caucasus region.
In February, Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov warned in an
interview on a rebel-affiliated Website that "the zone of military operations will
be extended to the territory of Russia ... the war is coming to their
cities."
Umarov also claimed his fighters were responsible for
the November bombing of the Nevsky Express
passenger train that killed 26 people en route from Moscow to St.
Petersburg.
The Moscow subway system is one of the world's
busiest, carrying around 7 million passengers on an average workday, and
is a key element in running the sprawling and traffic-choked city.
Helicopters hovered over the Park Kultury station
area, which is near the renowned Gorky Park.
Passengers, many of them in tears, streamed out of
the station, one man exclaiming over and over "This is how we live!"
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Associated Press Writers Jim Heintz and Mansur
Mirovalev in Moscow contributed to this report.