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KoriEllis
09-03-2004, 03:25 PM
www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/eu...index.html (http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/europe/09/03/russia.school/index.html)

CESLAN, Russia (CNN) -- Hundreds of people held hostage at a school in southern Russia fled to safety Friday, but scores are reported dead as pitched battles continue between troops and hostage-takers.

Reports said the hostages may have numbered as many as 1,200 and that 70 percent of them were children.

It was not clear whether several children and others, who were being held by a remnant of the hostage-taker hours after the school was stormed, were still in captivity.

Valery Andreyev, head of the local branch of the FSB intelligence service, said 20 hostage-takers had been killed, 10 of them from Arab countries, after Russian troops stormed the school earlier Friday. (Map of school)

Until now, the rebels have been regarded as residents of the restive republic of Chechnya or other Caucasus areas.

Many fatalities have been reported. Around 100 people have been seen dead in the school gym by journalists.

There also was a report that 23 bodies, including 17 children, were outside a hospital morgue and 10 more bodies were inside. One news report said the death toll could exceed 150.

Near the scene, news footage showed dead bodies of children on stretchers.

One woman leaned down to a young boy, hugging and caressing the youth, who shared a stretcher with another body. Other women stood shocked, holding their hands to their mouths and weeping.

Andreyev said 400 people had been freed in the storming operation, with many of them wounded. Earlier, scores of survivors ran from the school and people were being carried on stretchers to ambulances.

Special forces were mopping up pockets of rebel resistance at the school, clearing the burned-out building of wounded hostages and hunting down the hostage-takers who fled after special forces stormed the site.

Russian forces say they are in control of the school building, but the gunfire continued into the late afternoon and there were reports of militants firing from another structure in the school compound.

Hostage-takers have grenade launchers, small arms and have been sniping, and troops and the abductors have been fighting pitched battles.

The hostage incident began two days ago when an armed gang of Chechen rebels took hundreds of children, parents and teachers hostage on the first day of school in Beslan, located in North Ossetia, near Chechnya, where rebels have been fighting Russia and demanding independence for that small republic.

The storming was not planned, Russia said.

A local official from Russia's FSB intelligence service told Russian media the troops had been ready for a long siege.

However, the forces stormed the building around midday after Russian officials, under a cease-fire agreement with militants, tried to collect bodies lying outside the building.

There was an explosion, hostages fled, and hostage-takers opened fire on the children and rescue workers. One of the workers was killed and another was wounded.

Russian troops then opened fire at the rebels, and the battle began.

Several hours later the scene remained in chaos, with pockets of resistance remaining and machine-gun fire heard on the scene and troops going room-by-room as the wounded were being taken out of the building.

It is thought that the people in the gym might have died when explosives triggered the collapse of the roof and a fire.

Russian forces blasted holes in a building of the school to create exit points. A Russian soldier was hit by a bullet, and a news cameraman was hit.

The explosions heard at the scene could have resulted from mines and booby-traps planted near the school by militants, one report said.

Interfax quoted a Defense official as saying that "the terrorists planted a lot of mines and booby-traps filled with metal bolts in the gym" where hostages were held.

Officials said the hostage-takers had been holding more than 350 children, parents and teachers. Relatives said the number was much higher -- about 1,000.

Children who survived said they were denied food and water and had to take off their clothes because of heat. Some boys said that because they lacked liquids, they had to drink their own urine.

The standoff followed a bloody week in Russia, in which a female suicide bomber Tuesday killed nine people outside a Moscow subway station and two airliners were downed by two suspected Chechen female suicide bombers on August 24, killing all 89 people aboard the planes.

Russian officials have said the new wave of attacks is an attempt at revenge for last weekend's elections in Chechnya in which a Kremlin-backed candidate won the presidency.

bigzak25
09-03-2004, 07:01 PM
very sad.

i would like to think we could take precautionary measures for such a thing....but how?

IcemanCometh
09-03-2004, 08:06 PM
don't live in russia

TastesLikeChicken
09-03-2004, 08:47 PM
Not a great time to fly or learn in russia.

Driving, walking, working, eating, and sleeping probably aren't the safest either.

If you live in russia and you have a daugther, duct-tape a tennis racket to her hand and pray she can win enough money on the tour to relocate the family to Miami.

Aparently the Russian secret service watched the Waco compound coverage and thought that looked like a good way to handle things.

KoriEllis
09-03-2004, 09:52 PM
Actually they did everything they could to not raid them.


Raid wasn't planned

An FSB official told Russian media that troops had been ready for a long siege.

However, the forces stormed the building around midday after Russian officials, under a cease-fire agreement with militants, tried to collect bodies lying outside the building.

There was an explosion, scores of hostages fled, and hostage-takers opened fire on the children and rescue workers. One of the workers was killed and another was wounded.

Russian troops then opened fire at the rebels, and the battle began.

E20
09-04-2004, 12:36 AM
Thank God it's over.

MannyIsGod
09-04-2004, 02:11 AM
The russian people need to come study with the FBI. You can give the FBI and ATF shit about ruby ridge and Waco but they are honestly the best. This is not the first time a lot of people have died because the a situation like this has been handled horribly by Putin and his people. They need to let chechnya (sp?) go.

SequSpur
09-04-2004, 12:56 PM
**** terrorists. Get them before they get you. The new motto of the US.

Maybe France should STFU now....

WriterNum934
09-04-2004, 07:08 PM
You're NEVER going to stop terrorism or terrorists.

You have to create peace. Bottomline.

KoriEllis
09-04-2004, 08:08 PM
About 400 people are dead.

This is horrendous. I know people are going to compare it to Waco. But they didn't storm them causing all the bloodshed. They took over the school and they had bombs, boobytraps and landmines. A bomb went off in the gym, causing a fire and the roof to collapse. The hostages (including lots of kids) ran from the gym to try to escape the collapse. And they had snipers on the roofs picking them off and shooting them in the back.

timvp
09-04-2004, 08:14 PM
If this had happened in the US, people would be talking about how this is worse than 9/11. These cowards took woman and children hostage. That is about as low as you can go.

May they burn in hell.

Tony Le Parker
09-05-2004, 03:29 AM
Yeah, the FBI is awesome, so well-organized. They just toss away crucial information key to an impending terrorist attack. The LAST thing I would want the Russian intelligence doing is following the FBI and CIA's lead. If they need tips, go to the Israelis.