Islamic group claims responsibility for Russian plane crash

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SOURCE: Long Beach Press-Telegram
http://www.presstelegram.com/Stories/0,1413,204%257E24654%257E2363742,00.html

Islamic group claims responsibility for Russian plane crash

By Associated Press

MOSCOW (AP) -- One of two Russian airliners that crashed nearly
simultaneously was brought down by a terrorist act, officials said
Friday, after finding traces of explosives in the plane's wreckage. An
Islamic militant group claimed responsibility for the attack in a Web
statement.

The planes, with 90 people aboard, went down within 20 minutes of each
other Tuesday night. In Washington, White House spokesman Scott
McClellan said there was "mounting evidence" that both crashes "were
acts of terrorism."

Traces of the explosive hexogen were found in the remains of one of the
planes, a Tu-154, security service spokesman Nikolai Zakharov said. No
results from the investigation of the other crashed plane, a Tu-134,
have been announced.

"According to preliminary information, at least one of the air crashes
... has been the result of a terrorist act," a spokesman for the Federal
Security Service, Sergei Ignatchenko, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported.

The Tu-154 was carrying 46 people when it crashed en route to the Black
Sea resort of Sochi. The other flight had 44 people aboard, heading to
the southern city of Volgograd, when it went down.

NATO's chief blamed terrorism for both crashes.

"I condemn in the strongest possible terms the apparent act of barbaric
terrorism ... resulting in the crash of two Russian passenger aircraft,
and the senseless loss of innocent lives," NATO Secretary General Jaap
de Hoop Scheffer, said Friday.

Hexogen, the explosive found in the Tu-154, is the material that Russian
officials said was used in the 1999 apartment bombings that killed some
300 people in Russia, an attack blamed on Chechen separatists.

Despite the suspicious timing of the crashes and the fact they took
place five days before an election in Chechnya opposed by separatists,
Russian officials had kept open the possibility they were caused by bad
fuel or human error.

A Web site connected to Islamic militants published a statement on
Friday - signed the "Islambouli Brigades" - claiming responsibility for
the crashes. The statement's authenticity could not immediately be
confirmed.

The statement said five "mujahedeen" - holy fighters - were aboard each
plane. It said the two planes were downed as part of a series of
operations "to extend support and victory to our Muslim brothers in
Chechnya and other Muslim areas which suffer from Russian faithlessness."

The Federal Security Service declined to comment on the statement.

Russian officials have contended that the rebels fighting Russian forces
in Chechnya for nearly five years receive help from foreign terrorist
organizations, including al-Qaida.

Friday's claim did not refer to al-Qaida, but a group called "the
Islambouli Brigades of al-Qaida" claimed responsibility for last month's
attempt to assassinate Pakistan's prime minister-designate.

Lt. Khaled Islambouli was the leader of the group of soldiers who
assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in Cairo in 1981.

Russian officials, meanwhile, said they were investigating two female
passengers - one on each plane - with Chechen names. The two were the
only passengers whose relatives did not contact authorities, officials said.

Female suicide bombers with alleged Chechen connections have carried out
attacks in Moscow, including the twin bombing of an outdoor rock concert
and another blast outside a hotel adjacent to Red Square.

Paul Duffy, a Moscow-based aviation expert, told Associated Press
Television that he found it "hard to believe" that five attackers were
aboard each plane, "but there is no doubt that they had one at least on
each aircraft."

Both planes took off from Moscow's Domodedovo airport, one of Russia's
most modern and sophisticated. It was not immediately clear how airport
security systems could be circumvented to smuggle in explosives.

Although Friday's developments raised security concerns for the airlines
that crisscross the sprawling country, Russia did not order a halt to
air traffic, as the United States did after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Chechens on Sunday are to vote for the republic's president, to replace
Kremlin-backed Chechen president Akhmad Kadyrov, who was assassinated in
a May 9 bomb attack.

Officials had warned that Chechen separatists might try to carry out
attacks ahead of the vote, which is part of the Kremlin's attempts to
establish a modicum of civil order in the region and undermine
separatist rebels.

A Chechen connection to the crashes would be likely to further harden
the Kremlin's already-stony refusal to negotiate an end to the war, as
well as to expose weakness in its strategy.

"Here's the answer to how effective our politics in Chechnya have been,"
Russian legislator Vladimir Ryzhkov was quoted as saying in the
newspaper Novaya Gazeta.

Security analyst Andrei Soldatov said a connection could bring more
suffering to Chechnya, where Russian forces are widely criticized for
abusing and abducting civilians.

"The government will now be able to say that the fight against
separatists in Chechnya comes under the roof of international terrorism.
As soon as they say that, you can forget about human rights in the
region," he said.

Details of how the planes were destroyed remained incomplete. News
reports said at least one of the planes sent a distress signal
indicating a hijacking shortly before it disappeared from radar screens.

That led to speculation that Russian anti-aircraft missiles may have
shot down the planes to prevent a Sept. 11-type plan to crash them into
buildings. The Tu-154 was en route to Sochi, where Russian President
Vladimir Putin was at his summer residence.

However, independent military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer dismissed that
speculation, saying the plane wreckage did not show signs of being shot
down and that there are no anti-aircraft missile batteries in the
regions where the planes fell.

Victims' families began holding funerals Friday, including for Tengiz
Yakobashvili, a dual Russian-Israeli citizen. "He helped many people and
he did it quietly," Rabbi Shmuel Kuperman said at his funeral in Moscow.

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