Manhunt in Crimea for Possible Accomplice in School Attack

Manhunt in Crimea for Possible Accomplice in School Attack
Police vehicles are parked near a vocational college in Kerch, Crimea, on Oct. 18, 2018. Sergei Demidov/AP
The Associated Press
Updated:

MOSCOW—Authorities on the Crimean Peninsula were searching for a possible accomplice of the student who carried out a shooting and bomb attack on a vocational school, killing 20 people and wounding more than 50 others, an official said on Oct. 18.

An 18-year-old student, who later killed himself, was initially believed to be the only one to have been involved in the carnage at the Kerch Polytechnic College on Oct. 17. Authorities haven’t provided a motive for the shooting, and teachers and classmates described the attacker as a shy man who had few friends.

But Kremlin-appointed Crimean chief Sergei Aksyonov told Russian news agencies on Oct. 18 that it is possible that the attacker, identified as Vyacheslav Roslyakov, had an accomplice.

“The point is to find out who was coaching him for this crime,” he said. “He was acting on his own here, we know that. But this scoundrel could not have prepared this attack on his own, in my opinion and according to my colleagues.”

A policeman stands guard near a vocational college in Kerch, on Oct. 18, 2018. (Sergei Demidov/AP)
A policeman stands guard near a vocational college in Kerch, on Oct. 18, 2018. Sergei Demidov/AP

Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. Wednesday’s attack in the city of Kerch was by far the worst by a student in Russia, raising questions about school security in the country. The Kerch Polytechnic College had only a front desk with no security guards.

The death toll from the shooting climbed by one to 20 on Thursday after one of the wounded died in a hospital, and the first victim will be buried later in the day.

Dozens remain hospitalized in Kerch, and at least 10 people with severe injuries will be airlifted to top Russian hospitals for surgery, Health Minister Veronika Skvortsova said.

Rescuers carry an injured victim of a blast at at a college in the city of Kerch, on Oct. 17, 2018. (Kerch.FM/AFP/Getty Images)
Rescuers carry an injured victim of a blast at at a college in the city of Kerch, on Oct. 17, 2018. Kerch.FM/AFP/Getty Images

Most of the people killed died from gunshot wounds, and those who ended up hospitalized have injuries from a blast from an improvised explosive device that was packed with shrapnel.

“The kids’ muscles have been ’minced' with small metal objects,” Skvortsova said. “Those who have their organs ripped apart, we are finding metal balls in kidneys, intestines, in blood vessels. That is how powerful the blast was.”

The school attack in Kerch was the greatest loss of life in school violence in Russia since the Beslan attack by Chechen separatists in 2004, in which 333 people were killed during a three-day siege, many of them children, and hundreds of others wounded.

Since Crimea’s annexation, Russian authorities have repeatedly warned of a terrorist threat coming from unnamed Ukrainian nationalists as well as ethnic Tatars, an indigenous Crimean people. But despite acts of public defiance and rallies, both groups haven’t been engaged in any violent activities in Crimea.

By Nataliya Vasilyeva