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Volgograd: Four officials dead in Russian jail hostage-taking

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Volgograd: Four officials dead in Russian jail hostage-taking
Volgograd: Four officials dead in Russian jail hostage-taking

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Image source, baza

Image caption,

In an unverified video posted on social media, a man was shown holding a knife, apparently in a courtyard within the IK-19 Surovikino facility

Four prison employees have been killed after prisoners staged a revolt in a Russian penal colony and took eight hostages, federal authorities say.

Special forces stormed the IK-19 Surovikino facility in the southwestern Volgograd region after knife-wielding prisoners, who identified themselves as Islamic State (IS) militants, claimed to have taken control of the sprawling complex.

Authorities said the special forces operation had freed some hostages and “neutralised” all the attackers, but later confirmed that four prison employees died in the attack.

An unverified image posted on social media appeared to show an inmate holding a knife standing above a bloodied prison guard during the revolt.

Russia’s Rosgvardia National Guard said snipers shot four attackers in the rescue operation.

Heavily armed troops were filmed arriving at the prison in footage posted to the Telegram messaging app by the National Guard.

The attack began during a disciplinary commission meeting, Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service said in a statement. During the attack, the attackers slashed guards and wounded several prison staff.

Federal prison authorities said eight people had been taken hostage. Some reports in Russian media suggested that the prison’s director and deputy director had been seized.

In dramatic mobile phone footage released by the attackers, they identified themselves as IS militants. The men said they were motivated by the desire to avenge the persecution of Muslims.

The video also showed prison officials lying in pools of blood, while in separate clips the attackers roamed the prison courtyard.

Image source, Rosgvardia

Image caption,

National Guard troops were dispatched to the prison to end the attack

Volgograd regional governor Andrei Bocharov said earlier that the hostage-taking posed “no threat to the civilian population”.

President Vladimir Putin was filmed taking part in a virtual meeting with security chiefs, during which the Kremlin said he had been updated on the situation.

The Volgograd hostage-taking is the second such incident this summer, after six prisoners who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group captured two guards at a facility in the neighbouring Rostov region.

Five of the prisoners were killed and a sixth sentenced to 20 years in prison following the attack.

Prosecutors said they had opened a case relating to a hostage-taking.

IK-19 Surovikino is a high-security penal colony. It is believed to hold about 1,200 inmates.

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