Russian people have expressed condolences following the blast that rocked the St. Petersburg metro on April 3. A bomb exploded in a subway car as it was travelling between the Sennaya Ploshchad and Tekhnologichesky Institut metro stations in St. Petersburg. To date, eleven people have been killed and at least 45 hospitalized with injuries, according to Russia’s National Anti-terrorist Committee. The Russian Investigative Committee said the explosion was a terrorist attack, adding that it is considering other versions of the tragedy.
Russia mourns victims of St. Petersburg metro blast
People across Russia have paid their respects to the victims of the blast that rocked St. Petersburg metro on April 3
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A man lays flowers in memory of victims killed by a bomb blast in a subway train in St. Petersburg, at the Leningrad (St. Petersburg) Hero City memorial in front of the Kremlin wall in Moscow
© AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin People near the Leningrad Hero City memorial in Moscow
© Artyom Geodakyan/TASS People lay flowers in memory of the St Petersburg Metro explosion victims in Kaliningrad
© Vitaly Nevar/TASS Flowers in memory of the St Petersburg explosion victims at Chkalovskaya station of the Yekaterinburg metro
© Donat Sorokin/TASS Candles and flowers at an impromptu memorial in Simferopol's Lenin Square
© Alexei Pavlishak/TASS People light candles at an impromptu memorial in Lenin Square in Simferopol, Crimea
© Alexei Pavlishak/TASS Flowers in memory of the explosion victims at Tekhnologichesky Institut station, Saint Petersburg
© Sergei Konkov/TASS People honouring the victims of the St Petersburg metro blast at Spasskaya station, Saint Petersburg
© Alexander Demianchuk/TASS Cadets lay flowers in Podedy Square in Kaliningrad
© Vitaly Nevar/TASS Flowers and candles at Spasskaya station in Saint Petersburg
© Alexander Demianchuk/TASS A makeshift memorial in memory of the St Petersburg metro explosion victims in central Yekaterinburg
© Donat Sorokin/TASS