Moscow (Brussels Morning Newspaper) – The Russian FSB said it had thwarted a large attack in Yekaterinburg and arrested four teenagers who were planning to detonate a bomb in a crowded area.
Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said it had captured parts for a homemade explosive device and that authorities in the Sverdlovsk area had extended a criminal case. The Agency identified four teenagers born in 2007 and 2008 as Russian citizens but did not identify them.
The FSB stated those detained
“shared the thoughts of a terrorist organization outlawed in Russia and prepared to carry out a terrorist attack using a homemade explosive kit”
in areas where many citizens of Yekaterinburg are living. It stated that two of those arrested had also been involved in an arson raid on an interior ministry car. The Interfax news agency said that the arson attack was executed on Dec. 22, 2024.
What recent assassination plots did the FSB reveal against Russian officials?
Recently, the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) announced it had foiled several assassination attempts allegedly ordered by Ukrainian intelligence that targeted high-ranking officials of Russia’s Defense Ministry. According to reports, the FSB managed to prevent a chain of attempted assassinations targeting top-ranking military officers who were engaged in Russia’s operations and their close relatives.
According to the agency, the said plots were being coordinated by Ukraine’s intelligence forces and were to be performed by Russian nationals who had been recruited for such activities. As part of explaining the various plot schemes, FSB presented strategies such as those involving placement of explosives under Defence Ministry officials’ cars, observations of their living locations, and, among other designs, dropping off an explosive parcel masqueraded as a paper folder.
These incidents reflect ongoing tensions between Russia and Ukraine, with both sides accusing each other of orchestrating terrorist activities amid the ongoing conflict that began in February 2022.