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MOSCOW, Sept. 3 (Xinhuanet) -- At least 10 civilians, including five children, have been taken out dead on stretchers on Friday from the southern Russian school where hundreds of children were taken hostage. Russian special forces began to storm a residence where
hostager-takers are hiding, looking for 13 abductors who managed to flee the
scence of violence.
The Interfax news agency said a small group of
hostage takerswho have managed to escape from the school after Russian forces
stormed it were found hiding in a house adjacent to the building.
The militants are holding out within the areas of the
first ring of cordons established by Russian special forces and the hideout has
been encircled by policemen.
About 200 children hostages managed to escape the
school and hostage-takers tried to flee when Russian forces stormed the site
sieged by gunmen from Wednesday morning.
Gunfire and huge explosions continued even after the
special forces took control of the school.
Five hostage-takers were killed and Russian special
forces werepursuing two female kidnappers, dressed in white, who managed to flee
the sieged school towards the south of the town.
Russian TV footage show paramedics carrying
stretchers entered the school and brought children to ambulances.
Interfax said some of the hostage-takers, believed to
number about 40, had tried to break out through crowds of frantic relatives
waiting near the school as Russian special forces moved in.
It was unclear what had triggered the battle, a few
hours afterRussia insisted it would not resort to force to free the
children,parents and teachers being held hostage for a third day.
Alexander Dzasokhov, president of the republic of
North Ossetia,said the 40 or so masked gunmen were demanding an independent
Chechnya, the first clear link between them and the decade-long separatist
rebellion in the neighboring Russian republic.
Earlier, the special forces had blown a hole in a
school building to aid the hostages. Witnesses, who stood around 150 meters away
from the school, saw three armored personnel carriers with heavily armed
soldiers on board approaching the school.
The hostage crisis came after Russia suffered a
series of terrorist attacks over the past week.
An explosion near a metro station Tuesday in
northeast Moscow killed 10 people and injured 37 others. The explosion came
after Sunday's presidential election in Russia's Chechen republic, in which
Kremlin-backed Alu Alkhanov won a landslide victory to replace pro-Moscow Akhmad
Kadyrov who was killed in a terrorist bomb blast on May 9.
Just five days before the election, two Russian
passenger planes crashed almost simultaneously, killing all the 90 people
aboard. The incidents aroused fears that terrorist attacks were behind the
tragedies.
A group called the "Islambouli Brigades" have claimed
responsibility for the twin crashes and connected the crashes to the situation
in Chechnya.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that an
al-Qaida link to the crashes confirms a connection between Chechen rebels and
international terrorism.
Chechnya, a war-torn republic in Russia's Northern
Caucasus, won de-facto independence in 1996 after the pullout of Russian troops.
But federal soldiers returned to the lawless republic
in September 1999 and followed by a guerrilla war between Chechen rebels and
federal troops, occasionally spilling into neighboring regions.
On Wednesday, Putin said the government is prepared
to hold talks with all forces in Chechnya, except terrorists and separatists.
"There can be no dialogue with those who wanted to
fight and who made war a way of earning money. We shall fight against them,
throw them in prisons and destroy them," the Russian president told journalists
from leading Turkish media outlets following an interview with a Turkish
television company. Enditem |