Security measures of Moscow's Domodedovo airport do not stipulate the 100-percent examination of passengers' luggage
Published:
30 August 2004 y., Monday
Security measures of Moscow's Domodedovo airport do not stipulate the 100-percent examination of passengers' luggage.
Law-enforcement officers evinced interest in two passengers of the Chechen origin during the investigation of the two plane crashes.
S.Jebirkhanova was flying aboard the Tu-154 and Aminat Salm.Nagayeva was a passenger of the Tu-134 liner. Nagayeva was born in the settlement of Kirov, the Vedeno district of Chechnya and then she moved to Grozny. The relatives of the two women do not seek them and show no interest in their fates.
Twenty-seven-year-old Chechen female Aminat Nagayeva could have a motive to commit the terrorist act. One of her three brothers disappeared several years ago. Apparently, he had been arrested by the federal forces, the Izvestia newspaper wrote.
As far as the second suspect is concerned, investigators determined she was born in the Shali district of Chechnya. The Chechen Interior Ministry has not found any information about the woman yet. "The two women are missing in our database," a spokesman for the Chechen Ministry said.
"I would not make any comments yet for the sake of the investigation," FSB spokesman Sergey Ignatchenko said. According to the preliminary expertise, the explosive found on the crash site of the Tu-134 jetliner was hexogen. The expertise continues.
Security measures of Moscow's Domodedovo airport do not stipulate the 100-percent examination of passengers' luggage to detect explosives, KM.Ru reports. Special devices to trace explosives in bags and suitcases are used selectively, depending on the situation. Metal detectors of the airport are capable of detecting cold steel, fire-arms, grenades.
Šaltinis:
PRAVDA.Ru
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Until recently, the French assumed they had solved the issue of gays and marriage in a most civilized manner
more »
The book is expected to sell millions of copies worldwide
more »
An architect specializing in hypermarket design has angered some clerics in Poland, an almost exclusively Roman Catholic country, but won support from others with an idea to put chapels in shopping malls
more »
Panel overturns parliamentary vote against impeached leader
more »
Thousands of demonstrators gathered on the streets of Lodz on Monday to protest against the shooting deaths of two people
more »
In many countries, "e-government" is more political rhetoric than hard reality
more »
Prague city centre looks like a mini-european union this Friday
more »
Protests against European economic summit draw about 3,000 in Poland
more »
The Czech government took a first step towards legalising prostitution on Wednesday when cabinet approved a proposal to license sex trade workers
more »
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld yesterday said the Pentagon was not considering a return of the military draft
more »