Moscow:
Security services in Russia and Ukraine said on Monday they had foiled a plot to kill Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, but his opponents ridiculed the announcement as a campaign stunt six days before he runs in Russia's presidential election.
Russia's pro-government Channel One television said two men arrested belonged to a group seeking an Islamist state in Russia's North Caucasus. A computer seized contained numerous video files showing Putin's motorcade moving about Moscow, said the report.
"Our final goal was to go to Moscow and attempt to assassinate Putin," a bruised man described as one of the plotters was shown saying in a police interview transmitted on Channel One.
"Our deadline was after the election of the president of Russia," said the man, who was named as Adam Osmayev. "There are combat mines which are called armour-piercing mines. So it wouldn't necessarily have to be a suicide bomber."
Opinion polls show Putin will win the election and reclaim the post he held from 2000 to 2008. But he faces a growing opposition protest movement and wants to secure outright victory on Sunday, averting a runoff that might dent his authority.
A spokeswoman for Ukraine's security agency SBU said a man was detained in the Black Sea port of Odessa on January 4 after an explosion at an apartment that killed an accomplice.
Another suspect, on the international wanted list, fled, she said.
"We found him in an apartment and detained him without a single shot being fired on February 4," SBU spokeswoman Marina Ostapenko said.
"I can officially confirm that they were preparing an (assassination) attempt on Putin."
Viktoria Bogomolova, a spokeswoman for the FSO, an agency in charge of guarding Russian officials, confirmed the agency had worked with the SBU to identify the alleged attackers.
Channel One said one of the alleged would-be assassins, who had previously lived in London, had shown them a store of explosives close to one of Moscow's main roads used by Putin to go to his government residence.
The channel attributed the plot to a group known as the Caucasus Emirate, led by Chechen warlord Doku Umarov, which has carried out attacks including a suicide bombing at Russia's busiest airport last year which killed 37 people.
"Tactic Of Dictators"
The FSO spokeswoman said it would be premature to discuss taking any additional security measures following the incident.
Separatists in North Caucasus have said they are targeting Putin, Russia's dominant leader for the past 12 years and the man they hold responsible for a military crackdown on their movement.
Putin, a former KGB officer who has forged a tough guy image with stunts such as shooting a tiger and riding a horse bare chested, is often accompanied by hundreds of armed bodyguards when he travels.
Traffic is halted when he goes to and from work in Moscow in a long motorcade with flashing blue lights.
Several assassination attempts have been reported over the years and Channel One listed at least three previously unknown attempts on Putin's life over the past 12 years.
The Russian opposition, which has staged the biggest political protests since Putin came to power, reacted with scepticism, suggesting that the timing of the announcement was intended to attract sympathy for Putin before Sunday's election.
"Without a doubt there is always information about preparations or attempted terrorist attacks. But what does it really mean that (news of) this assassination attempt appears today?" said opposition parliamentarian Gennady Gudkov.
"The timing was certainly political," he told reporters.
Another opposition leader, Vladimir Ryzhkov, said that "assassination attempts are the favourite tactic of dictators".
Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the allegations as "inappropriate" given the "real threats for Putin's security". On Monday Putin, 59, chaired a meeting on the arms trade in his residence outside Moscow.
Long History Of Assassinations
Allegations of widespread fraud in a parliamentary election on December 4 have angered many liberals and nationalists in Moscow and St Petersburg.
The FSO spokeswoman said previous assassination attempts had taken place but declined to go into further details.
In one of the incidents, a sniper was widely reported to have been preparing to shoot at Putin and his ally, President Dmitry Medvedev, as they walked outside the Kremlin after Medvedev's victory in the 2008 presidential election.
Putin has remained the more powerful of the two, despite stepping aside to become premier in 2008 because of constitutional limits.
Russia has a long history of assassinations. Tsar Alexander II was killed by a bomb in 1881 and Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin was shot in a theatre in 1911.
A plot to kill Soviet dictator Josef Stalin along with the British and U.S. leaders was foiled in 1943. Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was shot at in 1969, and Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin survived several attempts to kill him. An attempt on President Boris Yeltsin's life was reported in 1993.
But no acting Soviet head of party, state or government was assassinated, and no Russian president or prime minister has been assassinated since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012
Russia's pro-government Channel One television said two men arrested belonged to a group seeking an Islamist state in Russia's North Caucasus. A computer seized contained numerous video files showing Putin's motorcade moving about Moscow, said the report.
"Our final goal was to go to Moscow and attempt to assassinate Putin," a bruised man described as one of the plotters was shown saying in a police interview transmitted on Channel One.
"Our deadline was after the election of the president of Russia," said the man, who was named as Adam Osmayev. "There are combat mines which are called armour-piercing mines. So it wouldn't necessarily have to be a suicide bomber."
Opinion polls show Putin will win the election and reclaim the post he held from 2000 to 2008. But he faces a growing opposition protest movement and wants to secure outright victory on Sunday, averting a runoff that might dent his authority.
A spokeswoman for Ukraine's security agency SBU said a man was detained in the Black Sea port of Odessa on January 4 after an explosion at an apartment that killed an accomplice.
Another suspect, on the international wanted list, fled, she said.
"We found him in an apartment and detained him without a single shot being fired on February 4," SBU spokeswoman Marina Ostapenko said.
"I can officially confirm that they were preparing an (assassination) attempt on Putin."
Viktoria Bogomolova, a spokeswoman for the FSO, an agency in charge of guarding Russian officials, confirmed the agency had worked with the SBU to identify the alleged attackers.
Channel One said one of the alleged would-be assassins, who had previously lived in London, had shown them a store of explosives close to one of Moscow's main roads used by Putin to go to his government residence.
The channel attributed the plot to a group known as the Caucasus Emirate, led by Chechen warlord Doku Umarov, which has carried out attacks including a suicide bombing at Russia's busiest airport last year which killed 37 people.
"Tactic Of Dictators"
The FSO spokeswoman said it would be premature to discuss taking any additional security measures following the incident.
Separatists in North Caucasus have said they are targeting Putin, Russia's dominant leader for the past 12 years and the man they hold responsible for a military crackdown on their movement.
Putin, a former KGB officer who has forged a tough guy image with stunts such as shooting a tiger and riding a horse bare chested, is often accompanied by hundreds of armed bodyguards when he travels.
Traffic is halted when he goes to and from work in Moscow in a long motorcade with flashing blue lights.
Several assassination attempts have been reported over the years and Channel One listed at least three previously unknown attempts on Putin's life over the past 12 years.
The Russian opposition, which has staged the biggest political protests since Putin came to power, reacted with scepticism, suggesting that the timing of the announcement was intended to attract sympathy for Putin before Sunday's election.
"Without a doubt there is always information about preparations or attempted terrorist attacks. But what does it really mean that (news of) this assassination attempt appears today?" said opposition parliamentarian Gennady Gudkov.
"The timing was certainly political," he told reporters.
Another opposition leader, Vladimir Ryzhkov, said that "assassination attempts are the favourite tactic of dictators".
Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the allegations as "inappropriate" given the "real threats for Putin's security". On Monday Putin, 59, chaired a meeting on the arms trade in his residence outside Moscow.
Long History Of Assassinations
Allegations of widespread fraud in a parliamentary election on December 4 have angered many liberals and nationalists in Moscow and St Petersburg.
The FSO spokeswoman said previous assassination attempts had taken place but declined to go into further details.
In one of the incidents, a sniper was widely reported to have been preparing to shoot at Putin and his ally, President Dmitry Medvedev, as they walked outside the Kremlin after Medvedev's victory in the 2008 presidential election.
Putin has remained the more powerful of the two, despite stepping aside to become premier in 2008 because of constitutional limits.
Russia has a long history of assassinations. Tsar Alexander II was killed by a bomb in 1881 and Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin was shot in a theatre in 1911.
A plot to kill Soviet dictator Josef Stalin along with the British and U.S. leaders was foiled in 1943. Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was shot at in 1969, and Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin survived several attempts to kill him. An attempt on President Boris Yeltsin's life was reported in 1993.
But no acting Soviet head of party, state or government was assassinated, and no Russian president or prime minister has been assassinated since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012
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