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In Wednesday's violence, a suicide bomber in a car detonated explosives when police tried to stop it in the town of Kizlyar near Dagestan's border with Chechnya, Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev said. "Traffic police followed the car and almost caught up -- but then the blast hit," he said. As investigators and residents gathered, a second bomber wearing a police uniform approached and set off explosives, killing Kizlyar's police chief among others, Nurgaliyev said. In addition to the dead, at least 23 people were wounded, authorities said. Windows were blown out and bricks tumbled down at a school and a police station nearby. Grainy cell phone video posted on the life.ru news portal showed the moment of the second blast, with officials wandering past a destroyed building before a loud clap rang out and smoke rose in the distance. Television footage showed a few gutted cars, damaged buildings and a six-foot-deep (two-meter-deep) crater in the road. The North Caucasus have been destabilized by near-daily bombings and other raids by Islamic militants. Police and security services are a frequent target because they represent the Kremlin
-- the militants' ideological enemy -- but also because of their heavy-handed tactics. Police have been accused of involvement in many killings, kidnappings and beatings in the North Caucasus, angering residents and swelling the ranks of Islamic militants. Police recently killed several high-profile militant leaders, including one known for training suicide bombers. A report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies said 916 people died in the North Caucasus in 2009 in violence related to the clashes, up from 586 in 2008. Another monitoring group, the Caucasian Knot, reported the region had 172 terrorist attacks last year, killing 280 people in Chechnya, 319 in Ingushetia and 263 in Dagestan. In January in Makhachkala, Dagestan's capital, a suicide bomber blew up a car at a police station, killing six officers. In August, 24 people died and more than 200 were injured when a man crashed a bomb-laden van into the police station in Nazran, Ingushetia. The bloodshed has continued despite Kremlin efforts to stem it. Medvedev, who claims the militants have spread through the North Caucasus "like a cancerous tumor," this year appointed a deputy prime minister to oversee the region and address its dire poverty and corruption. The first of Monday's attacks had struck at a symbol of Putin's power by hitting the Lubyanka subway station beneath the headquarters of the Federal Security Service, the successor to the KGB. Umarov referred to the attack as "greetings to the FSB." The second blast hit the Park Kultury station, near Gorky Park.
[Associated
Press;
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