International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)
Search :

News
News Home
News Stories
Press Releases
Speeches
Opinion Pieces
Audio & Video
Red Cross responds to Russian school hostage crisis
3 Sepzember 2004
by Alice Kiciejowski and Rita Plotnikova
Amid gunfire and explosions, groups of children and adults have been seen escaping from the school in Beslan, in the Russian republic of North Ossetia where they were being held hostage. A Russian Red Cross team of 20 doctors is on the spot, and other Red Cross teams are providing comfort and support to anxious relatives.

The first day of September is traditionally a day of celebration for the people of Russia – the day children start the new school year. But on 1st September 2004, the town of Beslan, in the southern Russian republic of North Ossetia, was unwillingly thrust into the international spotlight.

Around 9.30 am a group of masked men and women wearing bomb belts, demanding the release of imprisoned Chechen fighters and the withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya, burst into a school and took hundreds of children, teachers and parents hostage. Twelve people were killed in the first hours of the siege. On Thursday, 26 women and young children were freed from the school.

Some estimate as many as 1,500 people were in the building and as many as 200 may have been injured, according to hospital sources. They had been blocked in the school gym with mines and trip wires installed around, with no access to food or water, since the hostage takers had refused any assistance be delivered to the hostages.

Hundreds of relatives of those being held inside the school are waiting anxiously outside the security cordon

"We have mobilised Red Cross personnel, and informed the media and the government about our contingency planning," said Erik Prazdnikov, Russian Red Cross (RRC) Secretary General.
Prazdnikov, who is in Beslan.

Shortly after the school was seized, the RRC set up an operational group to coordinate the activities of the national headquarters in Moscow, and the local branches in Vladikavkaz and in Beslan.

"The Red Cross branch in Beslan, headed by the chief doctor of the central district hospital, Mr V. Karpenko, is directly involved in providing assistance," said Raisa Lukutsova, RRC vice president and head of the operational group. Some 20 Russian Red Cross doctors are on the spot, providing emergency assistance to hostages.

A team of some 60 Red Cross psychologists, nurses and medical doctors and volunteers are on stand-by to fly immediately to Beslan and provide further assistance to the hostages and their families.

A 24-hour phone line has also been established to give and receive information about the crisis situation.

Two large surgical kits, bandage materials and medicines have been transferred to the Beslan Central hospital from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warehouse in the North Caucasus, while the Russian Red Cross has asked the population to donate blood at State blood donor points to assist victims of the current hostage crisis, as well as yesterday's explosion outside a metro station in Moscow, which killed 10 people.

The Russian Red Cross and ICRC Moscow Office are ready to offer more bandages, medicines and surgical instruments and general assistance if necessary.

"The Russian Red Cross was quick in its response to the disaster in Ossetia," said Per Jensnaes, Head of the International Federation’s delegation in Russia. "These efforts are needed now and will be in big demand regardless of the outcome of the tragic event.”
A Russian police officer carries a released baby from the school seized by armed hostage-takers in the town of Beslan. (REUTERS/Viktor Korotayev/courtesy AlertNet)
RELATED LINKS
Activities un Russia
More news stories
Hundreds of relatives are waiting near the school. (REUTERS/Eduard Kornienko/courtesy AlertNet)
Near the school in Beslan, relatives of the hostages wait anxiously for news. The Russian Red Cross is offering them comfort and support (REUTERS/Vadim Tokhsyrov/ courtesy AlertNet)