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1,000 May Be Held at Russian School
AP ^

Posted on 09/03/2004 12:07:10 AM PDT by Happy2BMe

1,000 May Be Held at Russian School
01:34 AM EST - September 03, 2004

CLICK TO ENLARGE - A soldier carries a baby and a woman holds a child after being released by militants in Beslan, North Ossetia, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2004. Heavily-armed militants released at least 31 women and children on Thursday from the provincial Russian school where they are holding more than 350 hostages for the second straight day, officials said. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev)

The Associated Press


BESLAN, Russia

Camouflage-clad commandos carried crying babies away from a school where gunmen holding hundreds of hostages freed at least 26 women and children Thursday during a second day of high drama that kept crowds of distraught relatives on edge.

Two new accounts emerged, meanwhile, that the militants were holding at least 1,000 children, teachers and parents inside the school, far more than previously thought.

Russian officials had said that about 350 people were being held by raiders who seized the school in the North Ossetian city of Beslan on Wednesday. But a teacher who was among at least 26 women and children released on Thursday disputed that, according to a report published Friday.

"On television they say that there are 350 of us. That's not right. There's not less than 1,500 in the school," the respected newspaper Izvestia quoted the woman as saying on condition of anonymity.

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In addition, local legislator Azamat Kadykov told a meeting packed with worried relatives and friends Friday that the number of hostages was "more or less 1,000."

The reports could not immediately be confirmed, but the woman who spoke with Izvestia said that some 1,000 children were enrolled at the school, and the militants had captured teachers and many parents as well when they invaded the building Tuesday during a ceremony to celebrate the start of the new school year.

As the names of the freed hostages were read over a loudspeaker Thursday, men and women wept with disappointment or hugged each other with relief. Some of the toddlers released were naked, apparently because of the stifling heat in the school, where the hostage-takers refused to allow authorities to deliver water, food and medicine for the captives.

Tensions had risen earlier when the militants fired grenades at two cars near the compound ringed by security forces, and later two grenade blasts interrupted a nervous calm during the night.

Another explosion roared on Friday morning, as Kadykov and Leonid Rosahal, a pediatrician who has been involved in the negotiations, spoke to the crowd of worried residents.

Roshal told parents that all the children inside were alive. As he spoke, parents frantically scribbled names of their children on paper and tried to pass them to the doctor. Others began calling out names, begging for information about their loved ones.

"They want hysteria from us," Roshal said, trying to calm the increasingly desperate crowd. "Our strength is in (our) composure and good sense."

President Vladimir Putin said everything possible would be done to end the "horrible" crisis and save the lives of the children and adults being held at School No. 1 in Beslan, a town in the southern region of North Ossetia.

But it was uncertain how much either side was willing to give to avoid further bloodshed in the siege - the latest incident in a series of violent attacks believed linked to Russia's war in Chechnya. A dozen people were reported killed by the attackers when the school was captured Wednesday, but one official said Thursday that 16 died.

Reports after the standoff began Wednesday said the attackers demanded the release of people jailed after attacks on police posts in June that killed more than 90 people in Ingushetia, a region between North Ossetia and Chechnya. But officials said Thursday that the hostage-takers had not clearly formulated their demands.

Late Thursday, Lev Dzugayev, a North Ossetian official, said his previous statement that 354 hostages were seized Wednesday might have been too low, and many in the anxious crowds said they believed the number was much higher. "Putin: at least 800 people are being held hostage," read a sign held up for television cameras.

Valery Andreyev, chief of the regional office of the Federal Security Service, meanwhile said that contacts with the hostage-takers had resumed Friday morning, following an overnight suspension, but stopped again.

Relatives, friends and neighbors who crowded outside barricades blocking access to the school gasped when the hostage release was announced by Dzugayev, an aide to the president of North Ossetia.

Dzugayev and other officials said 26 women and children of various ages were released, but Russian media reported that one woman went back to be with her still-captive children. An official at the crisis headquarters said another group of five hostages was let go separately.

An Associated Press Television News reporter saw two women and at least three infants being led away by soldiers. Some toddlers among those released were completely naked, apparently because of the heat.

Dzugayev called the releases "the first success" of negotiations and said they came after mediation - including inside the school - by Ruslan Aushev, a former president of the Ingushetia republic who is a respected figure in the northern Caucasus.

The hostage release came after anxieties were sent soaring by two powerful explosions, followed by a plume of black smoke rising from the vicinity of the school. The crisis headquarters said the militants fired grenades at two cars that apparently drove too close to the building. Officials said neither car was hit, but a gutted car was visible not far from the school.

Thursday evening, a series of heavy thuds that sounded like artillery could be heard for several minutes, apparently coming from an area northwest of town. There was no information on what caused the sounds.

Two grenade blasts were heard early Friday, and the Interfax news agency reported a policeman was injured. One projectile exploded on a street several hundred yards from the school and another hit in a yard, witnesses said. Dzugayev said that the hostage-takers told Russian authorities they fired because they saw suspicious movement and that officials told them there was no such movement.

Any hint of violence put people on edge. After seizing the school, the militants reportedly threatened to blow it up if troops tried to rescue the hostages and warned they would kill prisoners if any of their gang was hurt. Authorities estimated 15 to 24 militants held the school.

In his first public comments on the crisis, Putin pledged to do everything possible to rescue the hostages.

"Our main task is, of course, to save the lives and health of those who became hostages," Putin said in televised comments during a meeting at the Kremlin with visiting Jordanian King Abdullah II. "All actions of our forces working on the hostages' release will be devoted and be subject to this task exclusively."

Two major hostage-taking raids by Chechen rebels outside the war-torn region in the past decade prompted forceful Russian rescue operations that led to many deaths. The most recent, the seizure of a Moscow theater in 2002, ended after a knockout gas was pumped into the building, debilitating the captors but causing almost all of the 129 hostage deaths.

Andreyev, the Federal Security Service's chief in North Ossetia, seemed to rule out the use of force against the hostage-takers.

"There is no alternative to dialogue," he told the ITAR-Tass news agency. "One should expect long and tense negotiations."

The militants' identity was also murky.

Dzugayev said the attackers might be from Chechnya or Ingushetia. Law enforcement sources in North Ossetia and Ingushetia, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the attackers were believed to include Chechens, Ingush, Russians and a North Ossetian suspected of participating in the Ingushetia violence.

Russia was on edge following the nearly simultaneous bombings on two jetliners last week, a suicide bombing in Moscow on Tuesday and the school siege.

The upsurge in violence has been a blow to Putin, who pledged five years ago to crush Chechnya's rebels but instead has seen the insurgents increasingly strike civilian targets beyond the republic's borders.



By MIKE ECKEL Associated Press Writer



TOPICS: Front Page News; Russia
KEYWORDS: caucasus; invasion; islam; ossetia; terrorism; war
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To: MarMema

Basayev, darn, you are right. Exactly. Mad about his foot.


101 posted on 09/03/2004 2:08:29 AM PDT by Iris7 ("Democracy" assumes every opinion is equally valid. No one believes this is true.)
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To: RussianConservative

smertnitsu - police, military. Right?


102 posted on 09/03/2004 2:17:56 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: Iris7

Basayev has been planning this for the last year, imo. There were posts on the chechen forums back in January which I think were about this operation.


103 posted on 09/03/2004 2:19:13 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: Happy2BMe

found online at:
Friday

utro.ru

6:20 AM (moscow time) automatic was heard, a minute after - two explosions

There are not 354 hostages, as was reported before, but 354 families!
This is according to the released hostages.

Terrorists are still refusing food, water and other supplies for the hostages.

One of the freed hostages, Zalina Dzandorva told the following:

There were a lot of wounded right away, those who could not walk on their own
were finished off. All the men who tried to resist were killed (around 20). Some wounded
were taken out from the gym and shot in the hallway.

Initially, the terorrists allowed (tap) water to be distributed among the hostages,
but then frustrated with the leaders of Ingushetia and North Osetia not meeting them,
they would not even give water to children.

The Zalina Dzandorva is also saying that 2 of the women with suicide belts blew
themselves up in the hallway where men were being held....

Gun shots and grenade launchers were being fired 40 minutes ago. There's some
information that one of the gunmen is a notorious terorrist. Possibly Doka Umarov,
but right now he is asked to be called "Goretz".



kommersant.ru
has more with Zalina Dzandorova (one of the free hostages). She's saying there are up to 1,500 hostages inside the schools. Hostages are, basically, one on top of the other in the gym. Windows had to be knocked out to allow more air in.

There are about 30 male terrorists. There were, also, 2 female terrorists with suicide belts, but they blew themselves up
in the school's hallway, which held some of the male hostages. After their exploded, the male terrorists said that their "sisters" were "victiorious".

Terrorists are not taking off their masks, but claim to be chechen. They told the hostages that they want russian troops out of Chechnya, and also that their children were killed by russians and they have nothing to loose.



104 posted on 09/03/2004 2:20:18 AM PDT by rawhide
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To: rawhide

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1206344/posts


105 posted on 09/03/2004 2:21:34 AM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry has been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security)
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To: Happy2BMe
FOX News reporting that the situation is under control now. The Russians have "full control" of the school.

Showing kids running around in their underwear (FOX says it was over 100 degrees in the Gym).

FOX mentioned approximately 350 kids were being held.


106 posted on 09/03/2004 3:19:50 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (There is only one GOOD 'RAT: one that has been voted OUT of POWER !! Straight ticket GOP!)
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To: Happy2BMe

Coming soon to the US.

Good thing guns are forbidden in schools here.

/sarcasm


107 posted on 09/03/2004 3:49:34 AM PDT by MonroeDNA (Kerry is a traitor)
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bump


108 posted on 09/03/2004 4:26:13 AM PDT by XHogPilot
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To: XHogPilot; Happy2BMe; hmmmmm; Drammach; Rebelbase; dennisw; SJackson; MeekOneGOP; B4Ranch; ...
Take notes, America. Is this what you want to happen in your schools and day care centers because you banned the wearing of headscarves?

Onward Muslim Soldiers - ping.

___________________________________________

Forces Storm Russia School With Hostages
07:21 AM EST - September 03, 2004

CLICK TO ENLARGE - Women and children who escaped from a school in southern Russia where militants were holding hundreds of people captive  in Beslan, North Ossetia, Friday, Sept. 3, 2004. A group of about 30 women and children broke out of a school in southern Russia where militants were holding hundreds of people captive Friday, a news agency reported, after two loud explosions were heard and Russian commandos opened fire near the building. (AP Photo/APTN) The Associated Press

BESLAN, Russia - Commandos stormed a school in southern Russia where hundreds of hostages had been held for three days, and dozens of hostages fled the building, some bloodied and screaming.

Exchanges of gunfire rang out and a large plume of smoke rose over the school as troops clashed with the militants. Reports said some of the gunmen who had captured the building on Wednesday had escaped.

Russian authorities claimed to be in control of the building, but gunfire continued for more than an hour and hundreds of students and others apparently remained inside. Troops blew a hole into the wall of the school to help them escape, the ITAR-Tass news agency said.

Some 200 hostages were wounded and five militants were killed in the raid, ITAR-Tass said. The Interfax new agency said several militants who escaped the school were in a local residence surrounded by troops.

The assault came after several explosions boomed from the area and dozens of hostages fled the school.

Some children were covered in blood, some of them carried away to a temporary hospital set up behind an armored personnel carrier. Many were only partly clothed because of the stifling heat in the gymnasium where they had been held since the militants took the building, and drank eagerly from bottles of water given to them once they reached safety.

The commandos stormed the building on the third day of the hostage crisis in Beslan. The Interfax news agency said militants fired at children who ran from the building, and unconfirmed reports said some of the hostage-takers, possibly including women bearing suicide belts, had fled during the chaos and may have taken hostages with them.

Women escaping the building were seen fainting and others, some covered in blood, were carried away on stretchers. After the escape, commandos assaulted the building.

Interfax said the school's roof had collapsed - possibly from the explosives some militants had strapped to their bodies. The militants had reportedly threatened to blow up the building if authorities tried to storm.

On Thursday, the militants had freed about 26 hostages, all women and children, and Russian officials had been in negotiations with the militants since they had seized the building Wednesday.

There were conflicting reports of the number of hostages, with official saying about 350 and people among a small group freed on Wednesday saying there were about 1,500.

President Vladimir Putin had said that everything possible would be done to end the "horrible" crisis and save the lives of the children.

Two major hostage-taking raids by Chechen rebels outside the war-torn region in the past decade prompted forceful Russian rescue operations that led to many deaths. The most recent, the seizure of a Moscow theater in 2002, ended after a knockout gas was pumped into the building, debilitating the captors but causing almost all of the 129 hostage deaths.

109 posted on 09/03/2004 4:44:53 AM PDT by Happy2BMe (I have knocked on the door of this man's soul and found someone home - Georgia Democrat Zell Miller)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

This is sounding more and more like a Tom Clancy book.

What did Tom Clancy know? When did he know it? And who is using his books as terror handbook guides.


110 posted on 09/03/2004 6:10:25 AM PDT by Calpernia ("People never like what they don't understand")
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To: Travis McGee
"Mecca is that pain threshold. They love death, death means nothing. But they fear losing the black moon-god rock."

I'm with you 100% on this, Trav. These orcs survive solely at our discretion, and I for one have completely had it with their crap. God help me for saying it, but it's time to glass Mecca and get the ball rolling for real. The longer we wait, the more overall cost and suffering we will incur in our mission to preserve civilization against these subhumans.

Click the Gadsden flag for pro-gun resources!

111 posted on 09/03/2004 7:12:23 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism.)
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To: MarMema

deathwishers..wanters...suicideguys...typical jihader.


112 posted on 09/04/2004 8:14:25 AM PDT by RussianConservative (Xristos: the Light of the World)
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