2002 Grozny OMON ambush
43°24′00″N 45°42′58″E / 43.4°N 45.716°E / 43.4; 45.716
Grozny OMON ambush | |||||||
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Part of Second Chechen War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Chechnya | Chechen Republic of Ichkeria | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
21 killed, multiple wounded | Unknown |
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(guerrilla phase)
- Galashki
- 1st suicide bombings
- 2nd suicide bombings
- Alkhan-Kala
- Vedeno
- 1st Grozny crash
- Tsotsin-Yurt
- Shelkovskaya crash
- 2nd Grozny
- Khankala crash
- Grozny truck bomb
- Znamenskoye suicide bombing
- 2004 Moscow
- Grozny Stadium
- Nazran
- 1st Avtury
- 4th Grozny
- 1st Nalchik
- Dagestan sieges
- Borozdinovskaya
- Makhachkala bombing
- 2nd Nalchik
- Gimry
- 2nd Avtury
- Vladikavkaz crash
- Border incident
- Shatoy crash
- Zhani-Vedeno
- Second Vlaikavkaz
The 2002 Grozny OMON ambush occurred on April 18, 2002, when Chechen insurgents killed about 8[1] and wounded two republican OMON special police officers.
The ambush occurred just 90 meters from Chechnya's main police headquarters. The first bus in a convoy hit a remote controlled mine, and the militants then opened fire on the line of vehicles from the ruins of a nearby high-rise building.
Another version of the attack was presented by Nezavisimaya Gazeta, which claimed there were two connected attacks.[2]
The incident preceded by two hours President Vladimir Putin's mid-term state-of-the-nation address, in which he said the "military phase" of the Chechen conflict had been completed.
References
External links
- Mine Leaves 21 OMON Troops Dead, The St. Petersburg Times, April 19, 2002
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