Subway
Blasts Is A Result Of Putin's Crimes In The Caucasus, Say
Mujahidun
04 April 2010
By Al-Ikhwah Al-Mujahidun
Explosions in the Moscow subway are a result of the
Russian criminal toward Caucasus in general and
Chechnya in particular, said Yuli Rybakov, a
well-known human rights activist and a former state
duma deputy.
The method used by Putin and Russia have led to
adequate results.
"We have now a regime which is 10 times worse than
what we had in the early 90s - Rybakov says. - An
aggression, which is increasing every day and every
year, is coming from the Caucasus in response to our
actions.
In the beginning of this campaign, Muslims were fully
unaggressive. The war made them aggressive. And it is
not surprising: in Chechnya every fourth was killed in
the war. Then why are we to be surprised that violence
has returned to us? This is the result of our policy
in the Caucasus".
"Violence and the abuse of human rights has continued
in Chechnya", according to a number of human rights
organizations. A number of aid workers and human
rights activists have been abducted and murdered.
According to Amnesty International, "The authorities
in Chechnya have continued to intimidate and persecute
human rights defenders and those who seek justice for
abuses. Several have been forced to leave the country
due to threats to their lives", the CNN reports from
Moscow.
Meanwhile, blasts in Moscow metro have seriously
affected the working rhythm of the transport system of
Moscow. Additional bus routes were organized, traffic
police restricted entry to the city center to avoid
traffic jams, taxi drivers turn up their prices for
travel.
As some of Russian agencies wrote the subway attack
paralyzed the transport system of Moscow. A third
transport ring is standstill in a traffic jam.
The central part of the city is closed for cars.
Several roads to Lubyanka metro station have been
blocked. The same picture is in the vicinity of Park
Kultury station.
Movement almost stopped on the outside of the Garden
Ring.
"Meanwhile, Moscow taxi drivers decided to cash in on
the tragedy", some Russian papers indignantly wrote.
People who came out of the subway are afraid to go
down into the subway and hailing taxi, there are a lot
of them, and cars in the center are quite a few. As
RIA News reports, taxi drivers increased prices to
almost 3,000 rubles ($ 100) per passenger for a short
ride.
They are on duty at the subway stations where the
explosions occurred, and inform citizens that the
station is closed.