Suicide Bombings Strike Moscow Metro

Moscow terror attacks
Konstantin Zavrazhin / Getty Images

Returning to Normality
People start taking the subway some hours after the suicide bombings. These co-ordinated attacks were the deadliest in Moscow since February 2004, when at least 39 people were killed by a bomb on a packed metro train as it approached Paveletskaya station. Six months later, a suicide bomber blew herself up outside Rizhskaya station, killing 10 people. Both attacks were blamed on Chechen rebels. In November 2009, the Caucasian Mujahadeen said it carried out a bomb attack that killed 26 people on board an express train traveling from Moscow to Russia's second city of St Petersburg.

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