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Siege

Beslan 10 years on: the Russian school attack which shocked the world

On the 10th anniversary of the Beslan school siege, TheJournal.ie returns to the tragic events of September 2004 that cost hundreds of innocent victims their lives.

A DECADE AGO today, hundreds of children flocked to a Russian school near the Georgian border for their first day back in the classroom after their summer holidays – many never to emerge again.

Two days later and after a tense standoff between Chechen insurgents and Russian troops, School Number One in Beslan, a medium-sized town in the province of North Ossetia, would be leveled in explosions and ravaged with gunfire as scores of children, parents and teachers lay dead.

The Beslan siege – also known as the Beslan massacre – became one of the most infamous terrorist incidents the world had seen and forever left the town’s name synonymous with the horrific events of September 2004.

Russia Boston Marathon Caucasus A wounded boy is carried from the school in Beslan after escaping during the hostage crisis. Ivan Sekretarev / AP/Press Association Images Ivan Sekretarev / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

It resulted in the deaths of nearly 400 people during the initial hostage crisis and the bloody aftermath as a series of blasts rocked the school and troops stormed the complex.

The toll included the loss of a claimed 334 hostages, at least 10 Russian special forces soldiers and 31 of the 32 militants reportedly involved in carrying out the hostage plan.

The lead-up

More than 1000 people were at the Beslan school on the morning of September 1, 2004, for traditional return-to-school activities, which featured many parents and other relatives accompanying the students.

Beslan Google Maps Beslan in North Ossetia, Russia Google Maps Google Maps

Meanwhile, a gang of heavily-armed rebels – some with explosives strapped to their bodies – left a neighbouring province en-route to the school.

The militants were members of a separatist group which was demanding recognition of Chechnya’s independence from Russia after years of bloody conflict between pro-Russian forces and paramilitary rebels in the nearby region.

Two years earlier, Chechen rebels had held more than 700 hostages inside a Moscow theatre, with the standoff only ending when Russian forces used poison gas to finish the siege.

RUSSIA THEATER RAID DMITRY LOVETSKY / AP/Press Association Images DMITRY LOVETSKY / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

More than 120 hostages were killed during the earlier incident.

How the crisis unfolded – day one

Just after 9am, up to 1200 children and adults were herded at gunpoint into the school’s hall, where bombs were attached to a series of tripwires.

A number of people managed to escape during the initial chaos and alert officials about the attack, with police and army forces quickly setting up a security perimeter around the school.

Russian School Seige A Russian serviceman on guard outside the Beslan school Press Association Images Press Association Images

Official estimates for the number of hostages initially ranged between 100 and 400 people, but the full figure was later revealed to be much higher.

The attackers quickly singled out a number of the strongest hostages and murdered most of the group, threatening to execute a further 50 children for every insurgent killed in any rescue attempt.

The Russian government said it would try to negotiate a peaceful resolution to the crisis and would not launch an assault on the complex.

Day two – negotiations

But early negotiations were unsuccessful and the hostages continued to be refused all water and food while they were held in the gymnasium for the second day.

Russian President Vladimir Putin made his first statement about the siege, telling the public: “Our main task, of course, is to save the lives and health of those who became hostages.”

TURKEY RUSSIA PUTIN Russian president Vladimir Putin, pictured in 2004 MISHA JAPARIDZE / AP/Press Association Images MISHA JAPARIDZE / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

Talks between the hostage-takers and officials continued throughout the day and in the afternoon a group of babies and nursing mothers were freed.

RUSSIA SCHOOL SEIZURE A soldier carries a baby as other released hostages escape the Beslan siege diA SERGEY PONOMAREV / AP/Press Association Images diA SERGEY PONOMAREV / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

Day three – the siege ends

Chechen independence leader Aslan Mashhadov was contacted and agreed to meet with the militants, but before he arrived at the school explosions and gunfire broke out at the site as paramedics approached the grounds to retrieve several bodies.

The source of the initial explosions remains in dispute – with Russian investigators blaming the militants for suddenly letting off bombs among the hostages, while other witnesses claim official forces were the first to open fire.

A fire broke out in the hall’s roof and debris began raining on hostages trapped inside as Russian forces began a full-scale assault on the complex.

Troops storm the main building in Beslan School Troops surrounding the Beslan school. Photas / Tass/Press Association Images Photas / Tass/Press Association Images / Tass/Press Association Images

Local police, armed civilians and tanks also joined the chaotic battle against the militants and it was several hours until the Russian military claimed control of the area, although shots and blasts continued to be heard into the night.

The fallout

Up to a quarter of the hostages were killed in either the explosions and gunfire or the gym fire and the building’s subsequent collapse, with the majority of the survivors suffering wounds during the traumatic events.

Russian School Seige Injured children are treated following the Beslan school siege. Photas / Tass/Press Association Images Photas / Tass/Press Association Images / Tass/Press Association Images

All except one of the known militants were killed in the siege.

The Russian government’s botched handling of the assault drew widespread criticism, including from survivors of the tragedy and victims’ families, while the militants’ actions in targeting children were also condemned.

In 2006, the only hostage-taker believed to have survived the attack, Nur-Pashi Kulayev, was sentenced to life in prison after a court declared him guilty of causing the deaths of 330 people and terrorism.

RUSSIA SCHOOL SIEGE Nur-Pashi Kulayev, a Chechen, was sentenced to life in prison in 2006 for causing the deaths of 330 people during the Beslan seige. SERGEI GRITS / AP/Press Association Images SERGEI GRITS / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

Later in 2006, the last reported victim of the hostage crisis, librarian Yelena Avdonina, 33, died of internal injuries she suffered during the siege – more than two years after Russian  troops stormed the building and the crisis was brought to an end.

In 2009, thousands returned to the school’s gymnasium to mark the fifth anniversary of the tragedy.

Russia Beslan Mourns Anguished relatives mark the fifth anniversary of the Beslan school crisis. Ivan Sekretarev / AP/Press Association Images Ivan Sekretarev / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

Many survivors remain traumatised by the events they witnessed as young children. One girl, Christina, told the BBC in 2009:

“I am scared of my dead friends. They come to me in my dreams. They have changed. They are dressed in black. They are angry and say ‘Why us? We wanted to live too!’”

Another, Chermen, remembered a militant dying in front of him in a grenade blast:

“A terrorist grenade was hit by a bullet. He blew up and his brains hit me in the face. It was horrible. It was fatty and slippery.”

A group of former hostages and relatives of siege victims have accused the Russian government in the European Court of Human Rights of failing to properly probe what caused the tragedy and denying their right to an objective investigation.

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