Russia says it has foiled a militant attack in Moscow
Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) said on
Monday that its officers had shot dead a man who was planning to carry out a
mass attack in the Russian capital.
Footage shown by state-run TV station Rossiya 24
showed a man lying face down on the ground with a Kalashnikov assault rifle
lying nearby.
According to the FSB, the man was shot dead when he
opened fire on officers trying to arrest him on the outskirts of Moscow. Media
reports said a bag containing hand grenades was found on the man.
The man, who the FSB said was from a Central Asian
country, was said to have had links to a militant grup in Syria.
The suspect's brother was also detained, the FSB
said. According to the Russian Interfax news agency, he had informed the
Interior Ministry two weeks ago of his suspicions that his brother was in
contact with international terrorists. Interfax also said that a search of an
apartment rented by the dead suspect had revealed evidence pointing to his
connections with militants in Syria.
Security officials have said that thousands of
people from former Soviet republics in Central Asia or from Russia's
Muslim-majority North Caucasus region have been fighting alongside militant
groups in Syria or Iraq.
An Islamist attack in 2017 claimed the lives of 15
people after a bomb went off in train carriage in the St. Petersburg metro.



