
Moscow concert hall massacre suspects say Ukraine ordered attack
Suspects in last year's deadly terrorist attack on a concert hall near Moscow have told investigators that the massacre was ordered by Ukraine, Russian media reported on Sunday, citing interrogation transcripts.
On March 22, 2024, four gunmen opened fire inside the Crocus City Hall music venue and set the building ablaze, killing 149 people and injuring more than 600. All four assailants were captured hours later while attempting to flee by car toward Ukraine, according to investigators.
Islamic State – Khorasan Province (ISIS-K), a regional branch of the Islamic State jihadist group, claimed responsibility for the massacre. The alleged attackers – Dalerdhzon Mirzoyev, Saidokrami Rachabalizoda, Shamsiddin Fariduni, and Muhammadsobir Faizov – are all citizens of Tajikistan.
According to the case files cited by the media, the suspects told investigators that 'a Ukrainian state entity' had ordered the attack, while ISIS-K served as the direct organizer. They reportedly said the weapons used in the massacre had come from Ukrainian territory.
RIA Novosti reported that Rachabalizoda told investigators the handler known to the group as 'Saifullo' instructed them to escape to Kiev, where each was promised around $13,000. The suspects also allegedly said their handlers were based in Türkiye and Afghanistan.
According to TASS, one of the suspects claimed the handlers intended the operation to appear as if it had been carried out solely on behalf of ISIS-K.
Ukraine has denied any involvement in the Crocus City Hall attack. However, Kiev has previously acknowledged carrying out targeted assassinations, sabotaging infrastructure, and blowing up rail tracks on Russian territory. One such act of sabotage in late May caused a passenger train derailment that killed five people and injured more than 100.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
2 hours ago
- Russia Today
Russian news outlet in Azerbaijan raided amid diplomatic row
The Azerbaijani Interior Ministry has announced a raid on the Baku office of Russian news network Sputnik. The move comes amid tensions between the two nations, following a police raid on suspected Azerbaijani gangs in Russia. There is a strong police presence around the building hosting the Sputnik newsroom in Baku, local media confirmed on Monday. The outlet's central office in Moscow said it cannot get in touch with its journalists. DETAILS TO FOLLOW


Russia Today
5 hours ago
- Russia Today
Russia abandons nuclear deal with new NATO member
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has ordered that an information sharing agreement with Sweden on nuclear accidents and nuclear installations be abandoned, after Stockholm joined NATO last year. The relevant document was signed by Mishustin on June 24 and published on the state portal for legal information on Friday. The deal, signed by the USSR and Sweden in 1988, taking force of April that year, stemmed from the 1986 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Convention on Early Notification of a Nuclear Accident, in which the agency's members agreed to notify each other of any nuclear accidents on their territory that could affect other countries. Scientists at the Swedish nuclear power station at Forsmark were among the first in the west to detect increasing radiation levels on April 28th 1986, two days after the explosion at the Chernobyl power plant in Ukraine. Sweden joined NATO in March 2024, abandoning its long-standing policy of neutrality. Stockholm has provided almost $10 billion in military and other assistance to Kiev since February 2022, while also announcing a major rearmament program at home. Russia constitutionally remains a successor state of the Soviet Union, having exclusively incurred the bloc's debt upon its dissolution, and Moscow recognises international treaties signed by the USSR. Russian ambassador to Stockholm Sergey Belyaev told RIA-Novosti in May that Stockholm's stance 'indicates that Sweden has completely lost its status of a neutral country and is turning into a springboard for the implementation of NATO's militaristic ambitions.'


Russia Today
7 hours ago
- Russia Today
EU state's president calls on other members to talk to Russia
Slovak President Peter Pellegrini has called on EU members to reopen direct talks with Moscow, while stressing that NATO military spending should reflect national priorities rather than fears of Russia.'We need to start talking to the Russian Federation,' Pellegrini told TA3 television on Sunday. 'Let two or three leaders step up… for example, [Italian] Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.'He defended Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico's meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which had drawn criticism from several Western governments. The two leaders held talks in Moscow in May during WWII Victory Day commemorations, where they discussed bilateral ties and the Ukraine president also rejected NATO's push for a rapid military buildup.'It should not be fear of Russia that drives us into rearmament. We ourselves must decide what strength and condition we want our armed forces to be in,' he said. He added that the defense industry is unprepared for large-scale procurement and stressed that public views on Moscow vary across the bloc. 'Half of society may not even see Russia as a threat,' Pellegrini along with Italy and the UK, supported setting 2035 as the target year for meeting the alliance's goal of spending 5% of GDP on backed Fico's demand for energy security assurances before approving the EU's 18th sanctions package against Russia, saying he saw no reason to oppose the move if it served the country's national Foreign Minister Juraj Blanar echoed Pellegrini's position, stating that the Ukraine conflict cannot be solved militarily. Speaking to the local public broadcaster STVR, Blanar said peace requires renewed communication with Moscow.'Let us return to respect for international law and seek ways to communicate with the Russian Federation,' he said, adding that the West should also find a way to work with Russia, 'and perhaps even forgive everything that has happened.'Along with Hungary, Slovakia has been one of the few NATO members to call for the de-escalation of tensions with Russia.