Dagestan: Death toll from attacks in Russian region rises to 20

Country mourns priest and police killed by gunmen in synagogues and churches on Sunday in North Caucasus

The death toll from a series of brazen attacks on churches and synagogues in Russia’s mainly Muslim region of Dagestan rose to 20 on Monday after gunmen went on the rampage on Sunday in co-ordinated attacks in two of the republic’s most important cities.

Men with automatic weapons burst into an Orthodox church and a synagogue in the ancient city of Derbent on Sunday evening, setting fire to an icon at the church and killing a 66-year-old Orthodox priest, Nikolai Kotelnikov.

In the city of Makhachkala, about 125km north on the shore of the Caspian Sea, attackers shot at a traffic police post and attacked a church.

Gun battles erupted around the Assumption Cathedral in Makhachkala and heavy automatic gunfire rang out late into the night. Footage showed residents running for cover as plumes of smoke rose above the city.

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There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Russia’s investigative committee said 15 policemen and four civilians were killed. According to Dagestan’s healthcare ministry, 46 more people were wounded.

At least five attackers were killed, some of them shown shot dead on a pavement by local media.

“This is a day of tragedy for Dagestan and the whole country,” said Sergei Melikov, the head of the Dagestan region, who on Monday visited the Derbent synagogue and church that had been attacked.

He claimed foreign forces had been involved in preparing the attack, but gave no details.

“This is an attempt to cleave apart our unity.”

Dagestan announced three days of mourning. Photographs of the dead policemen were placed on the street.

President Vladimir Putin, who has long accused the West of trying to stoke separatism in the Caucasus, sent his condolences to those who lost loved ones.

Dagestan is a mainly Muslim republic of Russia’s North Caucasus, a patchwork of ethnic groups, languages and regions that live in the shadow of the Caucasus Mountains between the Caspian Sea and the Black Sea.

The attack on Christian and Jewish places of worship stoked fears that Russia may be facing a renewed militant Islamist threat just three months after a deadly attack in Moscow.

In the Moscow attack, 145 people were killed at the Crocus concert hall, an assault claimed by Islamic State.

In October, after the war in Gaza broke out, rioters waving Palestinian flags broke down glass doors and rampaged through Makhachkala airport, looking for Jewish passengers on a flight arriving from Tel Aviv.

United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres condemned the attack and conveyed his condolences, a spokesperson said.

Derbent, one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities on Earth, is home to an ancient Jewish community and a Unesco World Heritage site.

Russian investigators said it was a “terrorist” attack but did not give details of the attackers.

Russia’s state media cited law enforcement as saying two sons of Magomed Omarov, the head of central Dagestan’s Sergokala district, were among the attackers in Dagestan. They were killed and their father was detained, state media said.

June 24th to 26th have been declared days of mourning in Dagestan, Mr Melikov said, with flags lowered to half-mast and all entertainment events cancelled.

The Russian empire expanded into the Caucasus in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, but an insurgency after the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union led to two wars.

In August 1999, Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev led fighters into Dagestan in a bid to aid Dagestani Wahhabist fundamentalists, triggering a major bombing campaign by the Russian military in advance of the second Chechen War. – Reuters