A woman suspected
of beheading a child in her care before brandishing the severed head
outside a Moscow metro station has said she acted to avenge Muslims
killed in the Kremlin's campaign of air strikes in Syria. In
video footage posted online on Thursday and circulated by several
prominent bloggers, the woman, 38-year-old Gulchekhra Bobokulova of
Muslim-majority Uzbekistan, gave her first detailed explanation of an
incident which state TV channels chose not to report. "I
took revenge against those who spilled blood," Bobokulova told someone
asking her questions off camera. "Putin spilled blood, planes carried
out bombings. Why are Muslims being killed? They also want to live." It
was not clear when the video was filmed, but Bobokulova was wearing the
same clothes as during a court appearance on Wednesday. The
Kremlin launched its campaign of air strikes in Syria on Sept. 30 in
support of President Bashar al-Assad, an intervention that altered the
course of the conflict there. A
Russian passenger plane was blown out of the skies above Egypt on Oct.
31 killing all 224 people onboard. Islamic State said it had carried out
the attack in revenge for Russia's Syria campaign. Police
on Monday wrestled to the ground Bobokulova, who had been working as a
nanny for a Moscow family, after she wandered around a Moscow street
holding the infant's severed head in the air and shouting Islamist
slogans. The child she is suspected of murdering was a 4-year-old girl. Investigators in
what the Russian media have dubbed the case of "the bloody nanny"
quickly raised the possibility that Bobokulova was mentally ill. They
have not made any mention of suspecting her of any terrorism-related
offense. On Wednesday, she told reporters Allah had ordered her to commit the grisly crime. In the same video, she said she had wanted to relocate to Syria but had lacked the money to do so. Russia's Investigative Committee was not immediately available to comment.
Nanny who beheaded Russian child says it was revenge for Putin's Syria strikes

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