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#7
PUTIN POINTS OUT SAUDI, CHECHEN BLAST LINK
MOSCOW, MAY 13 (RIA Novosti's Elena Glushakova) - There is a certain and
close link between the latest terror acts in Chechnya and Saudi Arabia, says
Russia's President Vladimir Putin.
The two blasts coincided in all details, and brought similar tragic fruit,
the President pointed out as he was opening conference with Lord George
Robertson, NATO Secretary-General, currently in Moscow.
With yesterday's blast in Znamenskoye, a district centre in Chechnya,
destructive forces based in the republic and outside it attempted to bar the
Chechen people's road to peace, said Mr. Putin.
Twelve months have passed since the Russia-NATO Council acquired an upgraded
status in Format Twenty. The Parties' stances still differ on certain
international matters, but the Council is, on the whole, justifying
expectations. Efforts are being pooled for combat against international
terrorism, mass destruction weapon nonproliferation, crisis retaliation and
rescue at sea. Council members are working on certain other essential matters,
as well. Those matters are really essential, and the latest blasts prove their
vital importance, stressed Vladimir Putin.
He thanked Lord Robertson for his opinion of the Znamenskoye blast. Russia is
willing to join hands with NATO against terrorism and in other spheres,
reassured the President.
Even if we had forgotten about our common cause for an instant, yesterday's
tragedies in Chechnya and Riyadh would have brought that cause into the
foreground, replied Lord Robertson.
The cruel acts arouse indignation worldwide, and call to build up anti-terror
efforts, he emphatically added.
An explosive-loaded Ural lorry blew up in an administrative complex in
Znamenskoye, Nadterechny district centre in Chechnya, yesterday morning. The
blast reduced eight buildings to debris, and badly damaged the Federal Security
Service district office and the district administration premises to kill 54. 86
injured persons are in hospital. 57 of them are at death's door. 23 of the
survivors were taken from under the debris, reports Russia's Ministry for
Emergency and Calamity relief.
Four blasts shook Riyadh, Saudi Arabia's royal capital, in the small hours
today - three in Al Hamra, a neighbourhood of predominant alien residence, and
one in the headquarters of a company engaged in US-Saudi military alliance. The
blasts killed 29 - seven Americans among them, and injured two hundred, reports
Saudi Arabia's Interior Ministry.
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