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2002 Kaspiysk bombing

Coordinates:42°31′48″N47°22′48″E / 42.53000°N 47.38000°E /42.53000; 47.38000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terrorist attack in Russia
Not to be confused with1996 Kaspiysk bombing.
2002 Kaspiysk bombing
2002 Kaspiysk bombing is located in Republic of Dagestan
2002 Kaspiysk bombing
2002 Kaspiysk bombing (Republic of Dagestan)
LocationKaspiysk,Dagestan,Russia
Coordinates42°31′48″N47°22′48″E / 42.53000°N 47.38000°E /42.53000; 47.38000
Date9 May 2002
TargetVictory Day Parade
Attack type
Land mine-based bombing
Deaths44
Injured133[1]
PerpetratorsBlamed onRappani Khalilov
Bold italics indicate incidents resulting in more
than 50 deaths. Incidents are bombings,
unless described otherwise.
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The2002 Kaspiysk bombing occurred on 9 May 2002, an attack which ripped through themilitary parade to commemorate the 57th anniversary ofSoviet victory in theSecond World War onLenin Street in the city ofKaspiysk,Dagestan.[1]

Forty four people, including at least 19 soldiers and 12 children, were killed and 133 wounded in the explosion.[1][2] The explosive device representedMON-50 directional landmine enhanced for greater destructive capability.[1]

Related events

[edit]

On May 16 Kaspiysk police announced that another terrorist attack had been prevented. Three terrorists were caught while planting aMON-100 mine, similar to that detonated on May 9. During the arrest, the suspects presented papers from Dagestan's Ministry of Internal affairs and said that police had no right to arrest them. Further investigation was blocked by the Russian state security serviceFSB, and the director of the service,Nikolai Patrushev announced that "the arrested parties had no connection with terrorists". Further fate of these suspects, one of whom was identified as Rashid Dzabrailov, remains unknown.[1]

Investigation

[edit]

According to the indictment brought after the investigation, the explosion was organized by the Dagestani militantRappani Khalilov. Khalilov allegedly sent his envoy named Kazim Abdurakhmanov to Dagestan to organize the bombing. Abdurakhmanov offered Abdulkhalim Abdulkarimov to join the plot, and Abdulkarimov agreed. Another militant, Dzhamal Turulayev, ordered Murad Abdurazakov to build the remotely controlledland mine-based bomb. The bomb was delivered to the potential explosion spot by Khanali Umakhanov. Abdulkarimov was videotaping the bomb installation, while Turulayev triggered the explosion by remote control.

However, on 1 July 2005, thejury found Abdulkhalim Abdulkarimov and Murad Abdurazakov not guilty of participating in the bombing.[3] They were found guilty on other charges, such as participating in illegal armed formations, possessing weapons andcounterfeiting documents, and they were sentenced to 14 years (Abdurazakov) and 11 years (Abdulkarimov) of imprisonment.[4]

Khanali Umakhanov was also found not guilty of most of the charges he was facing in court (includingterrorism) on 20 October 2005. He was found guilty of transporting the remote control device that triggered the bomb and sentenced to four years in prison, but the jury decided he did not know how the device was going to get used.[5] The sentence was later reduced to two years onappeal and he was released.[6] After release, he sued the Russian government for beingtortured when in custody and unlawfulprosecution. On 10 October 2007 the court found the government liable and awarded him 5,000,000 rubles (approx. USD 200,000) inpunitive damages.[7] The award was reduced to 3,000,000 rubles on appeal.[8]

Six Russian soldiers from units deployed atBuinaksk in Dagestan were also arrested for allegedly selling ananti-personnel mine to the men who carried out the attack.[9] They were put on trial in January 2003.[10]

As of May 2023, none of the other people who were still wanted by the law enforcement in connection with the plot (including Turulayev and Abdurakhmanov) have been arrested. The alleged mastermind, Rappani Khalilov, was killed in Dagestan on 18 September 2007.

References

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  1. ^abcdeYuri Felshtinsky,Vladimir Pribylovsky,The Corporation. Russia and the KGB in the Age of President Putin,ISBN 1-59403-246-7,Encounter BooksArchived 2012-02-25 at theWayback Machine; February 25, 2009, pages 136-138.
  2. ^"Deadly blast hits Russian parade".BBC News. 2002-05-09.
  3. ^(in Russian)Defeat parade,Kommersant, 4 July 2005.
  4. ^(in Russian)Militants did not come to be terrorists,Kommersant, 9 July 2005.
  5. ^(in Russian)Remote control determined to be a terrorism weapon,Kommersant, 21 October 2005.
  6. ^(in Russian)Supreme court forgave the accessory of Kaspiysk terrorists,Kommersant, 28 June 2006.
  7. ^(in Russian)The ministry of finance will pay for torture,Kommersant, October 11, 2007.
  8. ^(in Russian)Compensation for wrongly convicting of terrorism reduced,Kommersant, November 10, 2007.
  9. ^Arrests over Dagestan bombing,BBC News, 25 June 2002
  10. ^The Russian Army in ChechnyaArchived 2011-03-03 at theWayback Machine byPavel Felgenhauer
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