Blast At Vladikavkaz market kills at least 14

People stand at the blast site in Vladikavkaz.

More than a dozen people have been killed in an explosion in the Russian republic of North Ossetia that officials say was the work of a suicide car bomber.

The midday explosion took place in a busy central market in the local capital of Vladikavkaz. Grisly video footage from the site showed dead bodies lying unattended in pools of blood and frantic doctors carrying injured victims in their arms.

Officials variously put the death toll at 14 or 15. It was unclear if the bomber was included in either figure. At least 80 others were reported injured in the blast, including a number of young children.

Officials in North Ossetia and Moscow say the explosion was the result of a suicide bomber who parked a car packed with explosives near the market entrance.

The Interfax news agency quotes the North Ossetian Interior Ministry as saying the Volga car involved in the bombing had a number plate from the neighboring republic of Ingushetia.
Vladimir Markin, a spokesman for the Russian Prosecutor-General's Office, said a terrorism investigation had been launched into the attack.

A second explosive that failed to detonate was later detected at the entrance to the market.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin condemned the car-bomb attack. Speaking during a meeting with the chairman of Russia's Union of Muftis, Putin said the bombing was "aimed at sowing enmity between our citizens," and he expected Russian Muslims to make a "decisive contribution" to combating extremism.

History Of Violence

WATCH: (Warning: contains graphic images) An apparent suicide car bombing has struck a market in Vladikavkaz, the capital of North Ossetia in Russia's North Caucasus. (Video by Reuters)

The North Caucasus has been a growing source of concern for the Kremlin, as Islamic extremism and violent attacks continue to rise.

A suicide car-bomb attack on September 4 at a Russian Army base in Daghestan left at least five people dead, and came just days after an assassination attempt on a local Daghestan official.

Many local authorities say endemic poverty and the presence of hostile Russian security forces have contributed to the general unrest.

North Ossetia, which is predominantly Orthodox Christian, has generally seen less violence than other North Caucasus republics. But it is notorious as the site of the Beslan school siege tragedy, in which more than 330 children and adults were killed in September 2004.

North Ossetia also has its own history of bomb attacks. Alan Tskhurbayev, a former correspondent with RFE/RL's Russian Service, spoke to RFE/RL from the scene of the blast.

"It's necessary to say that this isn't the first blast in the Vladikavkaz central market. It's been the site of frequent explosions, starting in 1999, when 52 people were killed here," Tskhurbayev said. "If memory serves, this is already the fourth blast here, or something close to it."

Today's market blast comes 11 years to the day after a bomb destroyed an apartment block in the Russian capital Moscow, killing 94 people.

The Kremlin blamed the blast on Chechen militants and used the incident and subsequent blasts as a pretext for initiating a second federal war in Chechnya.

Radio Free Europe

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