Russia says 11 killed in shooting at the military base in Belgorod
Gunmen open fire on volunteer soldiers at a
Russian military training ground in Belgorod, killing 11 and wounding 15
others.
16 Oct 2022
Gunmen have opened fire at a Russian military training
ground near Ukraine, killing at least 11 people and wounding 15 others,
according to Russia’s Ministry of Defence.
The ministry said the “terrorist” attack took place on
Saturday in the southwestern Belgorod region that borders Ukraine.
It said the two assailants – nationals from an
unspecified former Soviet republic – fired on volunteer soldiers during target
practice and were killed by return fire.
The governor of Belgorod region, Vyacheslav Gladkov,
said no local residents were among those killed or wounded.
The shooting comes amid a hasty mobilisation ordered
by President Vladimir Putin to beef up Russian forces in Ukraine – a move that
triggered protests and caused hundreds of thousands to flee Russia.
It also comes a week after a blast damaged a bridge in Crimea,
the peninsula annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014.
“During a firearms training session with individuals
who voluntarily expressed a desire to participate in the special military
operation (against Ukraine), the terrorists opened fire with small arms on the
personnel of the unit,” the defence ministry statement said.
Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said in a YouTube interview that the attackers were from
the Central Asian nation of Tajikistan and had opened fire on the others after
an argument over religion.
Tajikistan is a predominantly Muslim nation, while
about half of Russians follow various branches of Christianity. The Russian
ministry had said the attackers were from a nation in the Commonwealth of
Independent States, which groups nine ex-Soviet republics, including
Tajikistan.
Al Jazeera was not immediately able to confirm the
comments by Arestovych.
The independent Russian news website Sota Vision said
the attack occurred in the small town of Soloti, close to the Ukrainian border
and about 105km (65 miles) southeast of Belgorod.
‘Poorly protected’
Elisabeth Braw, senior fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute, said the shooting showed how much anger there is at Putin’s mobilisation from
inside Russia, and other former Soviet states.
“Regardless of who the perpetrator was, it shows how
poorly protected Russian military bases are if somebody can just turn up and
kill 11 soldiers at the base. And it also shows how unprepared the Russian
authorities are. They didn’t even manage to kill them after one soldier was
shot. The perpetrators shot 11 soldiers,” Braw told Al Jazeera.
“So it is really extremely embarrassing … You can
imagine that if you are somebody who’s about to be called up or worried that
you’d be called up you look at this and say: ‘Well, I better make my way out of
the country through any means at my disposal because I don’t want to end up
like this,'” she added.
Putin had ordered the mobilisation three weeks ago,
part of a response to Russian battlefield defeats in Ukraine, with Kyiv’s
troops clawing back territory occupied by Moscow for months. Fighting is
particularly intense in the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk provinces, which
together make up the industrial Donbas region.
Putin said on Friday that more than 220,000 reservists
had already been called up as part of an effort to recruit 300,000. He promised
the mobilisation would be wrapped up in two weeks.
The mobilisation has been troubled from the start,
with authorities issuing confusing signals about who should be called up for
service in a country where nearly all men under the age of 65 are listed as
reservists.
Even though the Russian leader declared that only
people who had recently served in the military would be subject to the call-up,
activists and rights groups reported military conscription offices rounding up
people without any army experience – some of whom were also unfit for service
for medical reasons.
Some of the newly called-up reservists posted videos
of themselves being forced to sleep on the floor or even outside and given
rusty weapons before being sent to the front lines. Russian media reports said
some of those who were mobilised were sent to combat without receiving proper
training and were quickly killed.
Series of attacks on Belgorod
Saturday’s attack in the Belgorod training ground is
the latest in a series of incidents to have hit the Russian region.
Earlier Saturday, Governor of Belgorod Gladkov said an
oil depot was on fire after being shelled. He posted a photo showing flames and
plumes of black smoke rising above a building.
Last week, Russia complained of an increase in
artillery and missile raids on its territory bordering Ukraine.
And on Friday, the authorities said a Ukrainian attack
had set fire to a power station in the regional capital, also called Belgorod,
causing power cuts.
This came a day after a rocket gutted the top floor of
an apartment building in the city of Belgorod, without causing injuries.
A munitions depot in the region was also destroyed on
Thursday.
Earlier in the week, Russian officials said Ukrainian
attacks had knocked out power in the town of Shebekino in the same region. A
74-year-old woman died, and several others were wounded in the town.
Zelenskyy meanwhile said on Saturday that nearly
65,000 Russians had been killed so far since the invasion began on February 24,
a figure far higher than Moscow’s official September 21 estimate of 5,937 dead.
In August, the Pentagon said Russia had suffered between 70,000 and 80,000
casualties, either killed or wounded.
He also said that Ukrainian troops were still holding
the strategic eastern town of Bakhmut despite repeated Russian attacks while
the situation in the larger Donbas region remained very difficult. Russian
forces have repeatedly tried to seize Bakhmut, which sits on the main road
leading to the cities of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk. Both are in the Donetsk
region.
Zelenskyy, speaking in an evening address, also said
Russian missiles and drones had continued to hit Ukrainian cities, causing
destruction and casualties.
Kyiv said on Friday that it expected the United States
and Germany to deliver sophisticated anti-aircraft systems this month to help
defend against the missiles.
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