New Chechnya Bombing at Least 14 Killed

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A woman - bomber blew herself up Chechnya's capitol on Wednesday in the second such attack this week, killing at least 14 people and wounding scores of others. The latest bombing by Chechen independence fighters, apparently an attempt to assassinate the region's most senior pro-Moscow figure, followed a truck bomb at government offices in the north of the territory on Monday which killed 59. Chechen Emergencies Minister Ruslan Avtayev, denying earlier reports of 30 killed, said the death toll stood at 14 -- seven killed on the spot in the blast and seven dying later in hospital. A total of 145 people were wounded, of whom 45 were in a serious condition, the regional emergencies ministry said. The attack dealt a further setback to President Vladimir Putin's plans to end 10 years of separatist conflict in Chechnya as he prepared to sit down with visiting Secretary of State Colin Powell for talks on fighting 'terrorism' and other issues. Greeting Powell, who arrived from Riyadh where attackers killed dozens of people on Monday, Putin said grimly: "We have again been confronted with manifestations of terrorism: the terrorist act in Saudi Arabia and two terrorist acts in Chechnya. The latest took place today." The woman staged her mid-afternoon attack at a festival near the town of Iliskhan-Yurt, east of the regional capital Grozny, marking the birthday of the prophet Mohammad. Officials said she had intended to kill Akhmad Kadyrov, the pro-Moscow head of the Chechen administration and a strong advocate of Putin's peace plan, who addressed the crowd of about 15,000. "Kadyrov was speaking into the microphone from a stage, calling people to pray for peace. The woman approached him and his bodyguards rushed toward her. She then detonated the bomb," said Edi Isayev, Kadyrov's spokesman in Moscow. "This was without doubt an attempt to assassinate Kadyrov and all the religious figures who support Putin's peace plan," Isayev told Reuters. Kadyrov escaped unhurt. But Itar-Tass news agency said four of his bodyguards were among those killed by the bomb. Many of those killed were elderly. Local officials identified the bomber as 46-year old Shakhida Baimuratova, a fighter whose husband was killed in 1999 during the conflict. A police official, quoted by Interfax news agency, said Baimuratova belonged to a group of independence fighters loyal to Shamil Basayev, Russia's most wanted man. On Monday three bombers drove a truck loaded with explosives into a government office complex in Znamenskoye, a relatively peaceful part of the region in the north. A senior justice official in Chechnya said Russian authorities were studying the possibility that the fighters, frustrated by the tight grip of the Russian military in the region, had now switched to a campaign of bombing attacks. **PHOTO CAPTION*** Rescue officials examine the bodies of victims of a bombing attack in the village of Ilaskhan-Yurt about 25 km (15 miles) southeast of Grozny, Wednesday, May 14, 2003. (AP Photo/Musa Sadulayev)

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