Russia says bomb caused deadly train crash

The 14-carriage Nevsky Express, with around 700 people on  board, was jolted off the rails on Friday night on the main line  between Moscow and Russia’s second city, St Petersburg.

Three carriages of the luxury train, which is popular with  officials and business executives, lay battered beside the rails  after the blast.

It was the worst Russian bomb attack outside the mainly  Muslim North Caucasus since a spate of suicide attacks in 2004.

“A bomb equivalent to 7 kg (15.4 lb) of TNT was detonated,”  the head of the Federal Security Service (FSB) domestic  intelligence agency, Alexander Bortnikov, told Russian President  Dmitry Medvedev, citing the results of a preliminary  investigation. No group has publicly claimed responsibility for the blast  but a rise in bombings and suicide attacks over recent months in  Ingushetia and Chechnya had raised concerns that the violence  could spread deeper into Russia.

Analysts said such an escalation would likely turn the local  Islamist insurgency in the North Caucasus into a major political  issue for Russia’s leaders.

Medvedev sent his condolences to the families of the dead  and told ministers to ensure everyone received proper medical  care and compensation. “You must make sure there is no chaos,”  Medvedev told ministers on a video conference.

Bomb blast

Detectives said they had found fragments of a bomb at the  scene of the derailment, near the village of Uglovka about 350  km (200 miles) north of Moscow, and opened a criminal case under  terrorism laws. A 1-metre (3 ft) wide crater was visible under  the rails, one of which was twisted and broken.

Some witnesses said they heard a loud bang, but another  passenger told reporters in St Petersburg there had been no  blast. An elderly woman who lives in a nearby log cabin said: “I  thought it was an earthquake — the ground shook.”

Russia’s Emergency Ministry said at least 26 people had been  confirmed dead with another 18 missing, though one rescue  official earlier put the death toll as high as 39. Prosecutors  said more than 100 people had been injured.

During the early hours, conscripts in camouflage uniform  carried bodies away from the scene through the surrounding  woods. One body was wrapped in rags.

As hundreds of rescue workers toiled for hours, cutting  through the tangled steel of wrecked carriages to search for  survivors, railway officials said a second blast was detonated  nearby on Saturday afternoon.

No one was injured by the second bomb, the chief of Russia’s  state railway operator, Vladimir Yakunin, said.

He said the attack showed many similarities to an explosion  in August 2007 which derailed a similar Nevsky Express train on  the same route, injuring 30 people.

Prosecutors at the time arrested two residents of the mainly  Muslim North Cau-casus region of Ingushetia, but said the  mastermind behind the attack was ex-soldier Pavel Kosolapov, a  former associate of late Chechen rebel commander Shamil Basayev.

The Interior Ministry said they had identified several  suspects linked to Friday’s attack, but gave no details about a  possible motive.

“The so-called Chechen trace is traditionally viewed as the  main one during investigations of such disasters,” said Alexei  Mukhin, an analyst at the Centre for Political Information.

But Mukhin added that outdated Soviet-era infrastructure was  often the cause of major accidents in Russia.

The derailment has delayed about 27,000 people as transport  officials try to divert trains onto smaller lines, railway  officials said.

Friday’s railway disaster was the deadliest since December  2003 when a bomb blast tore through a passenger train in the  North Caucasus, killing 47 people.