St.Petersburg metro explosion-multiple casualties reported after blast on subway

A Russian court canceled the decision to admit to St. Petersburg metro's terrorist attack suspect ro the Russian citizenship, Russian Interior Ministry spokeswoman Irina Volk said Friday.

Court Strips St. Petersburg Metro Attack Suspect of Russian Citizenship
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201704211052855292-russia-terrorist-citizenship-metro/

A St. Petersburg court had ruled that the attacker's father provided false information when applying for his son's Russian citizenship and revoked both their passports, according to the ministry. The Jalilovs came to Russia from Kyrgyzstan. The father took his son to Russia in 2011 having already obtained the country's citizenship.


St. Petersburg's authorities announced on Friday that the total death toll of the recent terrorist attack in the city is sixteen people following the death of a female victim in hospital.

St. Pete Metro Bombing Victim Dies in Hospital, Bringing Death Toll Up to 15
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201704211052839159-russia-petersburg-metro-terrorism/

Sixteen people, including the suicide bomber, have ben killed in the St. Petersburg metro terrorist attack this month following the death of a female victim in hospital, local authorities said Friday.

On April 21 at 6:05 a.m. [03:05 GMT], the victim in critical condition born in 1960 passed away," St. Petersburg deputy governor Anna Mityanina wrote on Twitter.
 
Imam Shamil Battalion group has claimed responsibility for St. Petersburg terrorist attack, revealing that it allegedly acted on orders from al-Qaeda, the Search for International Terrorist Entities (SITE) institute announced Tuesday. The statement comes more than three weeks after the attack.

Group Claims Responsibility for St. Pete Attack, Says Acted on al-Qaeda Orders
https://sputniknews.com/military/201704251052991299-imam-shamil-battalion-responsibility-st-petersburg-bomb-attack/

The group's statement was originally published by a Mauritanian news agency and translated by SITE. In the statement, the group claimed that the bomber, Akbarzhon Jalilov, had acted on instructions from al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
 
FSB Detains Another St. Petersburg Metro Attack Suspect in Moscow
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201705111053511610-fsb-petersburg-attack-suspect-moscow-/

A native of Central Asia was detained in Moscow on Thursday on suspicion of involvement in the April 3 terrorist attack in the St. Petersburg metro,
the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) said in a statement.

"On May 11, 2017, the FSB of Russia, on request by the Russian Investigative Committee, searched for and detained a citizen of one of the Central Asian republics, Ermatov M.B., involved in the illicit trafficking of explosives and with suspected links to St. Petersburg suicide bomber Akbarzhon Dzhalilov," the FSB said in a statement.

According to the statement, the FSB operatives are investigating Ermatov's possible involvement in the attack that killed 16 people, including the perpetrator.

On April 3, an explosion occurred in the St. Petersburg underground on the stretch of rail between the Sennaya Ploshchad and Tekhnologichesky Institut metro stations at around 3 p.m. local time (12:00 GMT).
 
The individual, who carried out the attack in St. Petersburg underground in April, his fellows, as well as a foreign supervisor, used Telegram messenger at all stages of preparation for the attack, the Russian Federal Security Services (FSB) said Monday.

St. Petersburg Metro Attack Perpetrators Used Telegram at All Stages - FSB
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201706261054967933-petersburg-telegram-terrorists/

Terrorists on Russia's territory actively use Telegram messenger for communication between each other and their supervisors from abroad, FSB added.

"During the operational participation in the investigation into the terrorist attack in St. Petersburg underground on April 3, the FSB has obtained credible information that the suicide bomber, his fellows and a foreign supervisor had used Telegram messenger to hide their criminal plot at all stages of the preparation for the terrorist attack," the FSB statement said.

"Throughout the course of operational and tracking activities to detect hidden cells of international terrorist organizations, the Russian Federal Security Service records mass usage of online messengers by their members to carry out secret communication between each other and their supervisors from abroad," the FSB statement said.

According to the statement, "the Telegram messenger, which provides terrorists with the opportunity to create secret chats with a high level of encryption of transmitted information, is the most popular messenger among members of the international terrorist organizations in Russia."


It’s not often that Russia’s most fervent media detractors find themselves on the same page as the Kremlin. But when it comes to the dangers of internet anonymity, Moscow is making moves that some of its sternest critics want implemented in the West.

Why Telegram messenger is short of supporters as Russia moves to block it
https://www.rt.com/op-edge/393967-why-telegram-messenger-blocked/

Russian media watchdog Roskomnadzor’s target is Telegram, a popular messaging app, which is also known in the English-speaking world as ISIS’ communications platform of choice.

The service was founded by Pavel Durov, a St. Petersburg native, who first rose to prominence as the creator of VKontakte (In Contact), a Facebook rip-off popular across the former Soviet Union.

Moscow officials contend that terrorists and criminals are exploiting the application to direct their operations, and as a result, they want Telegram to share its users’ chats and their cryptokeys with law enforcement agencies, if and when requested. Should the IT firm fail to accept those terms, the service will be blocked in Russia. The Zello and Blackberry messenger services have already been cut off for non-compliance.

Durov insists he would never share this kind of data with anyone, meaning the proposed ban seems inevitable. He further counters that any prohibition would be pointless as it will just inspire nefarious actors to use American-competitors like Viber and WhatsApp.

Educated Views - But lawmakers argue that Telegram’s client base and structure means it’s a bigger threat to safety than either Viber or WhatsApp. A view supported by Professor Peter Neumann, an expert on terrorism at King’s College London, who told the Financial Times earlier this month, “Big social media platforms have cracked down on jihadist accounts, with the result that most jihadis are now using end-to-end encrypted messenger platforms such as Telegram. This has not solved the problem, just made it different.”

Neumann’s contention is echoed by Rob Wainwright, the head of Europol, who claims, “there are some that simply won’t co-operate with us. One in particular causing major problems for us is Telegram.”

And the Middle East Media Research Institute warned how Telegram has become a “fertile and secure arena” for ISIS and there “appears to be no way in to monitor it.”

The current furor started in May when Roskomnadzor first told Telegram it must register as an “information distributor.” Shortly afterward, the Russian parliament drafted legislation seeking to ban anonymity on instant messenger apps – requiring users to register accounts using their real names, verified with their phone numbers.

This mirrors a recent Times of London column by Edward Lucas who insists“online anonymity has enabled extremists to spread propaganda and raise money with impunity for far too long.” Lucas, a senior editor with The Economist, described the web as a “paradise for malefactors,” and called for pressure on tech titans to offer us “the ability to prove who we are, and to check the identity of the people we are dealing with.”

Lucas’ opinion is shared by Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum, who has written that “human rights, including the right to freedom of expression, should belong to real human beings, and not to anonymous trolls” in her call to put a stop to online anonymity.

The Next Stage - Nevertheless, Russia’s move has its detractors, with Bloomberg’s Leonid Bershidsky citing how “censoring the internet is as difficult as it is futile,” Moscow opposition journalist Oleg Kashin saying that ”Telegram really has become an important political platform.”

However, closing down online portals considered a threat to security is by no means an exclusively Russian phenomenon. For instance, Britain’s ruling Conservative Party is preparing to “introduce huge restrictions on what people can post, share and publish online,” according to Buzzfeed News. This fits with some ominous phrasing in their recent election manifesto, which states, “Some people say that it is not for government to regulate when it comes to technology and the internet; we disagree.”

It also follows comments from the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, who wants police and spy agencies to be granted access to WhatsApp and other encrypted messaging services.

Meanwhile, from 2010 to 2015, 2,130 people were arrested in the United Kingdom for allegedly posting ‘offensive’ messages on social media.

Across Europe, leaders are also calling for more restrictions on web discourse. Only last week, European Council President Donald Tusk said Brussels was ready to adopt relevant legislation “to prevent the spread of terrorist material on the internet.” Tusk was supported by new French President Emmanuel Macron, who has been a vocal critic of tech firms’ tolerance of extremist content.

Perhaps that’s why many of the usual suspects have been relatively slow to criticize Russia for its possible clampdown on Telegram. Because, in their heart of hearts, they realize Moscow is justified in taking steps against a platform which might make things a little too easy for the bad guys.
 
Russia's Investigative Committee believes that Katiba al-Tawhid wal-Jihad terrorist group (banned in Russia) was directly involved in carrying out a terrorist attack in St. Petersburg metro in 2017, a committee's investigator said Tuesday.

03.07.2018 - Investigators Name Terrorist Group Involved in 2017 St. Petersburg Metro Blast
Investigators Name Terrorist Group Involved in 2017 St.Petersburg Metro Blast

"The organizers and active participants of an international terrorist community that is structurally part of the Katiba al-Tawhid wal-Jihad terrorist organization have been put on the international wanted list," the investigator said at a session of the Moscow City Court.

On April 3, 2017, an explosion hit a train that traveled between two metro stations in St. Petersburg, killing 15 people and the bomber, identified as Akbarzhon Jalilov. Around 50 commuters were injured.

A total of 11 suspects are currently held in custody in connection with St. Petersburg metro blast.
 
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