Chechen warlord 'responsible for Moscow blackout'
A rebel-linked website said yesterday that Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev has claimed responsibility for a power cut that plunged Moscow into chaos two days earlier.
âOur diversionary units delivered a major blow to one of the most important life-support systems of the Russian empire,â the Kavkazcentre site quoted Basayev as saying in an email.
Russian officials have said the power failure, which began with an explosion and fire at a 40-year-old substation and affected the Russian capital as well as the surrounding region, was caused by worn-out equipment. The Federal Security Service declined comment on todayâs claim.
Wednesdayâs blackout affected millions of people, stranding underground and tram passengers and leaving entire neighbourhoods in the dark. Electricity was restored across the capital by about noon yesterday.
âThe Russian authorities are wilfully lying, hiding the real reason for the âtechnological catastropheâ, as well as trying to cover up the very serious consequences of this special operation we carried out,â Basayev said according to the website, which he has used in the past to claim responsibility for terrorist acts.
Basayev is Russiaâs most wanted man, and is seen as the driving force behind the Chechen insurgency since Russian security forces killed guerrilla leader Aslan Maskhadov on March 8.
Basayev has claimed responsibility for many of Russiaâs most grisly terrorist attacks, including the 2002 Moscow theatre hostage-taking and last Septemberâs school siege in southern Russia, in which more than 330 people died.
Russiaâs atomic energy agency issued a statement today denying that malfunctions had occurred at any nuclear facility on Wednesday or the following days. The statement apparently came in response to rumours of an accident at a reactor in Obninsk, about 60 miles south-west of Moscow.
âAll Rosatom (state atomic energy agency) facilities, including at Obninsk ⊠are working normally,â the statement said, adding that the power outage had no âsubstantial influenceâ on Rosatom enterprises.
The head of the nationâs electricity monopoly, Anatoly Chubais, has come under heavy criticism over the massive power outage in Moscow and environs.
Prosecutors interrogated Chubais, the head of Unified Energy Systems, about the blackout for four hours yesterday, news agencies reported, stressing that he was called as a witness.
In March 2004, police discovered a powerful bomb in an apartment building near Moscow and disposed of it without casualties.




