Suspects in Russia metro bombing charged for involvement in “terrorist act”

A picture shows the damaged train carriage at Technological Institute metro station in Saint Petersburg on April 3, 2017. Around 10 people were feared dead and dozens injured Monday after an explosion rocked the metro system in Russia's second city Saint Petersburg, according to authorities, who were not ruling out a terror attack. / AFP PHOTO / STR / ALTERNATIVE CROP
This picture shows the damaged train carriage at Technological Institute metro station in Saint Petersburg on April 3, 2017. Around 15 people died and dozens were injured after an explosion rocked the metro system in Russia’s second city. /AFP /

(Agence France Presse) — Three suspects in last month’s bombing in the Saint Petersburg metro have been charged for their involvement in a “terrorist act,” Russian investigators said Thursday.

Russia’s Investigative Committee said suspects Bakhram Ergashev, Ibragimzhon Ermatov and Makhamadyusuf Mirzaalimov have also been charged for possession of illegally used explosives.

Seven other suspects in the April 3 attack, which killed 15 people, will be charged in the near future, the committee said.

The Imam Shamil Battalion, a group suspected of links to Al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the bombing, United States monitor SITE Intelligence Group said last month.

In a statement cited by SITE, the group said the bombing served as a message to Russia and countries engaged in war with Muslims that the “price” of that war was “expensive.”

The claim came weeks following the attack, after Russian investigators had said they were looking into possible ties with Islamic State jihadists, who had threatened to attack Russia in retaliation for its intervention in Syria.

Russian authorities have attributed the attack to 22-year-old Akbarjon Djalilov, thought to be a Russian national born in Kyrgyzstan, who died in the blast.