Russian Caucasus | Attacks on churches and synagogues, police officers and a priest killed

Russian Caucasus | Attacks on churches and synagogues, police officers and a priest killed
Russian Caucasus | Attacks on churches and synagogues, police officers and a priest killed

(Moscow) Armed men attacked synagogues and Orthodox churches in the Russian Caucasus on Sunday, killing nine people, including a priest and police officers, authorities announced, denouncing “terrorist” acts.


Posted at 2:39 p.m.

Updated at 5:13 p.m.

The attacks took place in the capital of the Russian republic of Dagestan, Makhachkala, and the coastal city of Derbent. Dagestan is a predominantly Muslim Russian region neighboring Chechnya, also close to Georgia and Azerbaijan. Anti-terrorist operations are regularly announced there by the Russian authorities.

Sunday’s attacks targeted “two Orthodox churches, a synagogue and a police checkpoint,” announced the Russian Anti-Terrorism Committee, cited by the Ria Novosti agency. Jewish representatives, including the Russian Jewish Congress, said a second synagogue was also attacked.

A 66-year-old Russian Orthodox Church priest was killed in Derbent, authorities said. The death of six police officers was also announced by the Dagestan Interior Ministry. Authorities later said a National Guard officer also died, and another police officer succumbed to his injuries. Nine deaths in total, even if the authorities have not communicated an overall toll.

In total, sixteen people, including thirteen police officers, were injured and hospitalized, according to the ministry.

Armed individuals also opened fire on a vehicle carrying police officers, injuring one of them, in Sergokala, a village located between Makhachkala and Derbent, the local Interior Ministry further clarified to Russian agencies.

There is no evidence to determine the motivations or identities of the perpetrators of these attacks, which appear to be coordinated.

The Russian Anti-Terrorism Committee announced in the evening the end of the “active phase” of the anti-terrorist operation in Derbent, and indicated that two attackers had been killed.

Law enforcement also “eliminated four attackers in Makhachkala,” according to the Dagestan Interior Ministry.

The Russian Investigative Committee indicated that it had opened a criminal investigation into “terrorist acts”, without further details.

Synagogue on fire

Synagogues in Derbent and Makhachkala were burned, according to the chairman of the public council of Jewish communities of the Russian Federation, Boruch Gorin.

Images, taken up by Russian media, showed a burning building, presented as a synagogue.

In other videos, gunshots could be heard in the streets of Makhachkala, where a large police force was deployed.

The authenticity of these images could not immediately be verified by AFP.

Dagestan leader Sergei Melikov said “unknown people tried to destabilize society” on Sunday evening.

Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church and staunch supporter of the Kremlin, assured that the “enemy” sought to destroy “inter-religious peace” in Russia.

Its goal is to “plant the seeds of hatred”, he denounced, without naming those responsible.

In October, riots hostile to Israel broke out at Makhachkala airport.

A crowd of men had invaded its tarmac, amid tensions across the world linked to the conflict between Israel and Hamas, when a plane from Israel landed.

Russia has been targeted on multiple occasions by attacks and attacks claimed by the jihadist organization Islamic State (IS), even if its influence remains limited in the country.

In March, an attack claimed by ISIS at Crocus City Hall on the outskirts of Moscow killed more than 140 people.

Last weekend, several ISIS members were killed after taking two prison officers hostage in a prison in southern Russia, authorities said.

Russia faced an Islamist rebellion in the early 2000s in the Caucasus, a movement born from the first conflict against separatist Chechnya in 1994-96. It was defeated by Russian federal forces and in recent years, armed incidents have become rare there.

Nearly 4,500 Russians, particularly from the Caucasus, fought alongside IS in Iraq and Syria, according to official figures.

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