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Russian TV Broadcasts Siege Video
BBC ^ | 9-7-2004

Posted on 09/07/2004 4:00:47 PM PDT by blam

Russian TV broadcasts siege video

Watch the video

Dramatic video footage of inside the school in Beslan during the siege has been aired on Russian television. It shows adults and children packed into the school gymnasium as heavily-armed, masked men walk around the room.

Explosives, apparently wired and ready for use, lie on the floor while others are looped around basketball hoops at either end of the gym.

Russia's NTV network, the first to broadcast the video clip, said it had been recorded by the hostage-takers.

The network did not explain how it obtained the pictures.

The footage shows hundreds of hostages crowded into the gym - many with hands above their heads.

We've been to the morgue 10 or 15 times and opened up all the body bags, but Timor is not there

Slava, looking for her nephew They are still fully-clothed - although fanning themselves in the heat - suggesting the video was shot soon after the school was seized.

The camera zooms in on one hostage-taker, standing next to a young boy, with his boot on what NTV said was a book rigged with a detonator.

A woman hostage-taker, fully-clad in black dress and headscarf, is seen in the doorway holding a pistol.

There is also footage of blood on the floor, and a fire in another building on the school premises.

The BBC's Steven Eke in Moscow says that for many families in Beslan this will be the last footage of their loved ones alive.

DNA tests

For a third day, the grief-stricken town was burying more of the 330 people, mostly children, who died in the battle that ended the siege on Friday.

Relatives of around 200 people still missing were queuing up to give blood for DNA tests on the bodies that remain unidentified.

Agony goes on for relatives
Ethnic war fears

Officials say 107 bodies were damaged beyond recognition by the fire and the explosions.

The BBC's Sarah Rainsford in Beslan says anguished relatives have had to go through body bags themselves, as there are no accurate lists of victims.

"We've been to the morgue 10 or 15 times already. We've opened up all the body bags but Timor is not there," said Slava, who is looking for her 10-year-old nephew.

"We've asked officials where his remains are and no-one can tell us. Where did so many children disappear to?"

Rallies

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people took to the streets in Moscow as part of a government-endorsed rally against terrorism - one of several around the country.

Muscovites brandished banners, religious insignia and Russian flags in a massive show of unity during a second day of official mourning for the victims of the siege.

Map of the North Caucasus

Enlarge Map

The BBC's Rob Cameron in Moscow says people are still consumed with anger at the events in Beslan.

"How can you kill children and shoot them? I came because Russia was slapped in the face and we will not take it," a pensioner named as Valery told AFP news agency.

But correspondents say there is also rising anger over the Russian authorities' handling of the siege.

Newspapers have also been posing awkward questions, such as whether the security services really had no plans to storm the school.

Some have accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of using the rallies to deflect public anger over unanswered questions.

But the Russian president responded to his critics strongly on Tuesday, in particular to calls for talks with those seeking independence in Chechnya.

He told two British newspapers that entering talks was akin to the West negotiating with Osama Bin Laden, and said: "No one has a moral right to tell us to talk to child killers."

But Chechen rebel spokesman Akhmed Zakayev has said the rebels had no part in the "barbaric act of terrorism".

He blamed the attack on "local radical groups" and warned that President Putin's "punitive policy" in the region would make a "repeat of the Beslan tragedy inevitable".


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Russia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: beslan; broadcasts; ossetia; russian; siege; tv; video
Please go to the BBC site to view the video. I don't know how to make a link to that, sorry.
1 posted on 09/07/2004 4:00:48 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

BTTT


2 posted on 09/07/2004 4:09:45 PM PDT by Brad’s Gramma
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To: blam
There were reports of a rape video as well. I suppose it was on the same tape sent to Putin to get him to negotiate.

What monsters.

3 posted on 09/07/2004 4:13:35 PM PDT by Martin Tell (I will not be terrified or Kerrified.)
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To: blam

>>Broadband video news from the BBC is only available to international users by subscription. Find out how to get the latest broadband video news from the BBC <<

Anyone know where we can see it for free?


4 posted on 09/07/2004 4:19:38 PM PDT by netmilsmom (Morologus es!)
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To: blam

Did they show the rapes?


5 posted on 09/07/2004 4:30:27 PM PDT by Max Combined
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To: blam
He blamed the attack on "local radical groups" and warned that President Putin's "punitive policy" in the region would make a "repeat of the Beslan tragedy inevitable".

Sounds like he's asking to be nuked.

6 posted on 09/07/2004 4:35:42 PM PDT by Jaded ((Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society. - Mark Twain))
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To: blam
"But Chechen rebel spokesman Akhmed Zakayev has said the rebels had no part in the "barbaric act of terrorism"

Yeah, Osama and the Taliban denied it at first too... In fact you can tell when the terrorists realize they've gone too far when the stop taking credit and start denying.

You can tell that Russia is slowly becoming NOT a police state when it is possible to assemble an army of 30 complete with uniforms and a army truck (they arrived in what looked like an army truck) and the local police are clueless.

Still, I suspect an inside job, especially if weapons were hidden inside as is speculated. Someone saw something, and kept quiet, someone saw suspicious neighbors and said nothing. Someone had a soft-spot in their heart for the Chechen cause, and looked the other way. More to come out on this later, I'm sure.
7 posted on 09/07/2004 4:35:51 PM PDT by konaice
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To: Max Combined
"Did they show the rapes?"

Don't know, I didn't watch it...my computer is so old and I'm on dial-up...it won't take video.

8 posted on 09/07/2004 4:38:59 PM PDT by blam
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To: konaice
" Someone saw something, and kept quiet, someone saw suspicious neighbors and said nothing. Someone had a soft-spot in their heart for the Chechen cause, and looked the other way. More to come out on this later, I'm sure."

I expect you're correct.

9 posted on 09/07/2004 4:40:50 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Here is the video...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/video/40046000/rm/_40046492_video22_brown07_vi.ram

GRAPHIC video showing the horror experienced by the hostages during the Beslan school siege was broadcast on Russian television last night.

The Patriot Edition

10 posted on 09/08/2004 3:09:13 AM PDT by PatriotEdition (http://www.patriotedition.com)
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