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  Hostages freed after forces storm in Russian school   (Agencies)  Updated: 2004-09-03 19:25  
 Commandos stormed a school in southern Russia where hundreds of hostages had 
been held for three days and took control of the building Friday, Russian news 
agencies reported. The assault came after several explosions boomed from the 
area and dozens of hostages, including naked children, fled the school 
screaming. 
 
 
 
 
 
   A boy cries as he 
 sits in a car with his relatives after he was released from the school 
 seized by heavily armed masked men and women in the town of Beslan in the 
 province of North Ossetia near Chechnya, September 3, 2004. 
 [Reuters] |   About 250 hostages were wounded, including 180 children, and 
five militants were killed in the raid, the Itar-Tass news agency reported. The 
Interfax news agency reported militants fired at children who ran from the 
building, and unconfirmed reports said some of the hostage-takers, possibly 
including women bearing suicide belts, had fled during the chaos and that they 
may have taken hostages with them. 
Hundreds of hostages apparently remained in the building as the firing raged. 
Women escaping the building were seen fainting and others, some covered in 
blood, were carried away on stretchers. Many children were only partly clothed 
because of the stifling heat in the gymnasium where they had been held since the 
militants took the building Wednesday. 
 After the escape, commandos assaulted the building and the firing subsided 
after about 45 minutes, possibly indicating the crisis had come to a violent 
end. 
 
 
 
 
   A video grab image 
 shows security forces surrounding the school seized by heavily armed 
 masked men and women in the town of Beslan in the province of North 
 Ossetia near Chechnya, September 3, 2004. [Reuters] 
 |   Interfax reported the school's roof had collapsed - 
possibly from the explosives some militants had strapped to their bodies. The 
militants had reportedly threatened to blow up the building if authorities tried 
to storm. 
On Thursday, the militants had freed about 26 hostages, all women and 
children, and Russian officials had been in negotiations with the militants 
since they had seized the building Wednesday. 
 There were conflicting reports of the number of hostages, with official 
saying about 350 and people among a small group freed on Wednesday saying there 
were about 1,500. 
 
 
 
 
   Russian security 
 forces hide behind the wall during a military operation around the school 
 seized by heavily armed masked men and women in the town of Beslan in the 
 province of North Ossetia near Chechnya , September 3, 2004. Russian 
 soldiers battled Chechen separatists on Friday to end a two-day-old school 
 siege as naked children ran out screaming amid explosions and machinegun 
 fire. [Reuters] |   President Vladimir Putin had 
said that everything possible would be done to end the "horrible" crisis and 
save the lives of the children. 
Two major hostage-taking raids by Chechen rebels outside the war-torn region 
in the past decade prompted forceful Russian rescue operations that led to many 
deaths. The most recent, the seizure of a Moscow theatre in 2002, ended after a 
knockout gas was pumped into the building, debilitating the captors but causing 
almost all of the 129 hostage deaths.
   
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
  
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