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Negotiations begin in Russian school hostage drama
02 September 2004
MOSCOW: A heavily armed gang seized up to 400 hostages at a Russian school near Chechnya last night and threatened to kill 50 children for any member of their group killed, a senior local official said.
Itar-Tass news agency said negotiations had begun with the gang of up to 17 men and women who stormed into the secondary school in Beslan in North Ossetia province during a morning ceremony to mark the first day of the new school year.
The assault bore the signs of a Chechen rebel operation and was the latest in a recent spate of deadly attacks in Russia which have killed more than 100 people. As dusk fell there were no signs of any end to the siege around the low brick building.
Hundreds of armed security officials surrounded the school. Armoured vehicles were stationed nearby.
There were no details on the negotiations.
"They have said that for every fighter wiped out they will kill 50 children and for every fighter wounded - 20," regional Interior Minister Kazbek Dzantiyev told reporters in Beslan.
North Ossetia lies to the west of the seething Chechnya region where Russian forces have been fighting a war with separatist rebels for a decade.
PUTIN SILENT
President Vladimir Putin, whose hard-line tactics over Chechnya separatists helped bring him to power in 2000, has said nothing in public since the attack. However, the mass hostage-taking targeting a school marks a new challenge and raises the level of violence in Russia.
Earlier in the day, Putin broke off his seaside holiday to rush back to Moscow, immediately dispatching his interior minister and head of the FSB security service to Beslan.
The gang, some strapped with explosives and reported to have mined the school grounds, later set free 15 of the children, Itar-Tass news agency said.
At least eight civilians were killed in the attack - seven of them dying of wounds in hospital, news agencies quoted officials as saying. Nearly 50 children had managed to escape.
Witnesses near the school said sporadic gunfire resounded throughout the day and there was at least one loud unexplained bang from inside the school.
"Every gunshot I hear is like a shot into my heart," said one woman, Vera, tears pouring down her cheeks and whose child was among the hostages.
There was confusion over the exact number of hostages but local police eventually put the number at between 300 and 400.
Tass said 132 children were among the hostages.
RUNNING FOR HER LIFE: Soldiers help a child flee from her school where raiders, suspected to be Chechen rebels, are holding about 400 people hostage and have threatened to kill children.
Reuters Television
SECURITY COUNCIL
In a surprise move, Russia called for a UN Security Council meeting on "terrorist acts" in the country.
Moscow has for years doggedly rejected any outside role, and criticism of its own role, in Chechnya, insisting it was a domestic affair.
But recently, Russian officials have been pointing more to foreign involvement in the attacks, possibly linked to al Qaeda.
On Tuesday, a female suicide bomber blew herself up in central Moscow in an attack that killed nine and injured 51.
A week earlier, two passenger planes were blown up apparently by suicide bombers, killing 90 people and which officials say were almost certainly linked to Chechen rebels.
The wave of attacks raises questions over Putin's hard-line strategy to bring Chechen separatists to heel but in the past he has shown no signs of buckling to their pressure.
Previous hostage-taking involving Chechen rebels, seeking withdrawal of Russian troops from their region, have all ended with huge loss of life.
When rebels seized 700 hostages at a Moscow theatre in 2002, 129 hostages and 41 guerrillas were killed when Russian troops stormed the building using poisonous gas.
In 1995, Chechen separatists took hundreds of hostages in a hospital in the southern Russian town of Budennovsk. More than 100 died during the assault and a botched Russian commando raid.
The recent attacks have all been timed around last Sunday's presidential election in Chechnya which the Kremlin's candidate won by a landslide.
The school attackers rebuffed an attempt by a local Muslim leader to talk to them and demanded a meeting with top regional officials to discuss demands for the release of fighters seized in neighbouring Ingushetia in June during a rebel raid there.
Underlining how much government nerves have been shaken by the latest barrage of attacks, Russia deployed extra troops to guard dozens of nuclear facilities.
Authorities appeared to have closed main roads leading into the province and the airport, possibly fearing new attacks.