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Russian police free child hostage, kill seven militants in Dagestan

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MOSCOW | Sat Dec 29, 2012 1:31am EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian security forces killed seven militants and freed a 6-year-old girl taken hostage in the restive Dagestan region of Russia's volatile North Caucasus on Saturday, a national anti-terrorism committee official told Interfax news agency.

The incident took place in an apartment building in the provincial capital of Makhachkala, according to the Interfax report. The militants broke through a wall, entered an apartment and took the girl hostage, according to the report.

"However, as a result of coordinated and professional actions of the special forces, the child was set free and the remaining bandits were neutralized," an anti-terrorism committee representative was quoted as saying.

The Interfax report identified the leader of the militants involved in the incident as Gadzhimurat Dolgatov and said he was among the seven killed. The report said those killed had previously served sentences for crimes including murder, extortion, theft and robbery.

During the incident, the militants opened fire and threw a grenade at the special forces personnel while trying to flee, but no security forces were hurt, Interfax reported.

Rebels who say they are fighting for an Islamic state in the strip of North Caucasus provinces often target police and security forces as well as government officials and mainstream Muslim leaders in attacks.

Rights activists say the insurgency is also driven by poverty and anger at the heavy-handed tactics of the Russian security forces.

(Reporting by Nastassia Astrasheuskaya; Editing by Will Dunham)

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Comments (1)
MikeBarnett wrote:
Russia, China, and four of the “stans” are part of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and they have agreed to watch Afghanistan after the US leaves on 12-31-2014. This incident and many others like it in the southern Caucasus are reasons for these countries to be concerned about islamic insurgents in central Asia. They will spend their resources because they live in the region. The US should watch from a distance and see how well they do their work.

Dec 29, 2012 6:47pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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