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Chechen Rebels Claim Moscow Subway Bombing

Updated at 6:43 p.m. ET

A Chechen militant leader claimed responsibility for Monday's deadly subway bombings in Moscow the same day two suicide bombers killed 12 people, including nine police officers, in Southern Russia.

Doku Umarov, who leads Islamic militants in Chechnya and other regions in Russia's North Caucasus, said in a video posted Wednesday on a pro-rebel Web site that Monday's twin suicide attacks were an act of revenge for the killing of civilians by Russian security forces. He warned that attacks on the Russian cities will continue.

Umarov's statement was posted after Prime Minister Vladimir Putin vowed to "drag out of the sewer" the terrorists who plotted the subway bombings, which killed 39 people and injured scores of commuters during rush hour.

Wednesday's suicide bombings in Dagestan, a volatile southern province east of Chechnya, could have been planned by the same group behind Moscow's bombings, Putin said.

"I don't rule out that this is one and the same gang," Putin said at a televised Cabinet meeting. President Dmitry Medvedev later called the attacks "links of the same chain."

Umarov said he "treats with a grin" all the accusations of terrorism leveled against him because no one has accused Putin of killing civilians in Arshty, who Umarov said were mostly poor villagers picking wild garlic to feed their families when the February 11 attack occurred, reports CBS News' Khaled Wassef.

Russia's two recent wars in Chechnya have spawned Islamist nationalist movements in neighboring territories, reports CBS News Correspondent Mark Phillips.

"If the Chechen conflict festers, it will increasingly start infecting the other parts of the Caucasus region, which is a mosaic of many ethnic disputes, all of which are simmering away," said Jonathan Eyal, an analyst at the Royal United Services Institute.

Umarov may be from Chechnya, but he calls himself the Emir of the Caucasus and wants to establish an Islamic republic across much of the region, Phillips reports.

The subway bombings in Moscow were the first suicide attacks in the Russian capital in six years and shocked a country that had grown accustomed to having such violence confined to its restive southern corner.

Umarov also blamed ordinary Russians for turning a blind eye to the killing of civilians in the Caucasus by security forces and warned that more attacks on Russian cities are coming.

"I promise you that the war will come to your streets and you will feel it in your lives, feel it on your own skin," Umarov said in a video posted on kavkazcenter.com, a Web site affiliated with the rebels.

Officials at Russian law enforcement agencies refused to comment on Umarov's claim, but the Russian security chief has previously said that the subway bombings were carried out by militants from the Caucasus.

Moscow police have been on high alert since the subway attacks, beefing up roadblocks on highways leading into the city. The agency's chief said Wednesday that thousands of officers have been sent to patrol the subway, check on migrants from southern provinces and inspect warehouses that could hold arms caches.

In Wednesday's attack, a suicide bomber in a car detonated explosives when police tried to stop the car in the town of Kizlyar near Dagestan's border with Chechnya, Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev said.

"Traffic police followed the car and almost caught up - at that time the blast hit," Nurgaliyev said.

As investigators and residents gathered around the scene of the blast, a second bomber wearing a police uniform approached and set off explosives, killing the town's police chief among others, Nurgaliyev said.

In addition to the dead, at least 23 other people were injured, authorities said. Windows were blown out and bricks tumbled down at a school and a police station nearby.

Grainy cell phone video footage posted on the life.ru news portal showed the moment of the second blast, with officials wandering past a destroyed building before a loud clap rings out and smoke rises in the distance. Television pictures later showed a few gutted cars, damaged buildings and a 6-foot deep crater in the road.

Police and security services are a frequent target because they represent the Kremlin - the militants' ideological enemy - but also because of their heavy-handed tactics. Police have been accused of involvement in many killings, kidnappings and beatings in the North Caucasus, angering residents and swelling the ranks of Islamic militants.

A report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies said 916 people died in the North Caucasus in 2009 in violence related to the clashes, up from 586 in 2008. Another monitoring group, the Caucasian Knot, reported the region suffered 172 terrorist attacks last year, killing 280 people in Chechnya, 319 in Ingushetia and 263 in Dagestan.

The bloodshed has continued despite Kremlin efforts to stem it. Medvedev, who claims the militants have spread through the North Caucasus "like a cancerous tumor," this year appointed a deputy prime minister to oversee the troubled region and address the root causes of terrorism, including dire poverty and corruption.

Monday's subway bombings, carried out by two women, were the first terrorist attacks in Moscow since 2004.

The first blast struck the Lubyanka station in central Moscow, beneath the headquarters of the Federal Security Service or FSB, the KGB's main successor agency. The FSB is a symbol of power under Putin, a former KGB officer who headed the agency before his election as president in 2000.

About 45 minutes later, a second blast hit the Park Kultury station on the same subway line, which is near the renowned Gorky Park. In both cases, the bombs were detonated as the trains pulled into the stations and the doors were opening.

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