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Darya Dugina was born on 15 December 1992 in Moscow, Russia. [6] She was the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin and his second wife, philosopher Natalya Melentyeva. [7] In 2012/2013, while studying at Moscow State University, she was an intern at Bordeaux Montaigne University, specializing in Ancient Greek philosophy. [8]
The Domodedovo International Airport bombing was a suicide bombing in the international arrival hall of Moscow's Domodedovo International, in Domodedovsky District, Moscow Oblast, on 24 January 2011. The bombing killed 37 people [ 24 ] and injured 173 others, including 86 who had to be hospitalised. [ 25 ]
2006 Moscow market bombing: August 21, 2006 Moscow 13 A bomb exploded at Cherkizovsky Market, frequented by Central Asian and Caucasian immigrants. The bombing killed 13 people and injured 47, Eight members from the group The Saviour were convicted for the bombing. 2006 Vladikavkaz Mi-8 crash: September 11, 2006 Near Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia ...
Four days after that, in another Moscow neighborhood, a car bomb took 119 lives. A final bomb went off in Volgodonsk, a southern city. ... an ancient city steeped in Russian history not far from ...
In July 1998, Putin was appointed as the director of the Federal Security Service (FSB). [5] In August 1999, he became the prime minister of Russia. [6]In September 1999, a series of explosions hit four apartment blocks in the Russian cities of Buynaksk, Moscow and Volgodonsk, killing more than 300, and injuring more than 1,000.
A military court in Moscow sentenced a man to life in prison on Monday after finding him guilty of attempting to assassinate prominent Russian nationalist writer Zakhar Prilepin in a car bombing ...
Yuri Luzhkov, Mayor of Moscow at the time of the bombings, believed that the bombings in Moscow were facilitated by new legislation that established freedom of movement within the country, [232] which was restricted prior to 1993. According to Luzhkov, the law made it possible for Chechen terrorists to bring weapons to Moscow and store them ...
A series of three terrorist bombings in Moscow on 8 January 1977 killed seven people and seriously injured 37 others. No one claimed responsibility for the bombings, although three members of an Armenian nationalist organization were executed early in 1979 after a KGB investigation and a secret trial.