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2003 Tushino bombing

Coordinates: 55°49′25″N 37°26′5″E / 55.82361°N 37.43472°E / 55.82361; 37.43472
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2003 Tushino bombing
Part of Spillover of the Second Chechen War and Islamic terrorism in Europe
Location of Moscow Oblast in Russia
LocationTushino airfield, Moscow, Russia
Coordinates55°49′25″N 37°26′5″E / 55.82361°N 37.43472°E / 55.82361; 37.43472
Date5 July 2003
Attack type
Suicide bombing
Deaths15 (+2 terrorists)
Injured60
PerpetratorsRiyad-us Saliheen[1]

The 2003 Tushino bombing was a terrorist attack that occurred on July 5, 2003, at Tushino Airfield in Moscow, Russia, killing 15 people and injuring up to 60 more.

Two Chechen shahidka (Muslim female suicide bombers) committed suicide attacks at the entrance to a rock festival called Krylya (Russian: Крылья, lit. Wings) being held at the Tushino airfield in north-western Moscow. The first bomber, 20-year-old Zulikhan Elikhadzhiyeva, detonated her bomb which only partially exploded, killing only herself.[2] Only a few meters away from where Elikhadzhiyeva had detonated, 26-year-old Zinaida Aliyeva detonated her explosives 15 minutes later, killing 11 people on the spot while at least 60 people were injured, with four of them later dying in hospital.[3] Russian authorities stated that had the suicide bombers been able to enter the airfield, the casualties would have been significantly higher.[3] They opened a criminal investigation into the attack.

The Tushino bombing was part of a string of suicide attacks in Russia that had occurred within the previous four months, killing 165 people in total, in the context of the Second Chechen War.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Басаев запускает "Бумеранг"" (in Russian). Кавказский узел. 15 September 2003. Archived from the original on 3 March 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
  2. ^ Female Suicide Bombers Unnerve Russians Archived 2015-05-27 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, August 7, 2003
  3. ^ a b Two Moscow concert bombers kill 14 Archived 2012-10-20 at the Wayback Machine, CNN, July 6, 2003