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Related events of Figure-134

New circumstances emerged in the crash of two Russian passenger planes, which further confirmed that the Tu-134 also exploded before the crash. At the same time, the identities of the two women on the two planes aroused suspicion. The Chechen Republic and the Republic of Chechnya held their second presidential election in a year on the same day.

On the afternoon of August 29, 2004, the identities of 88 of the 90 victims of the Russian Tu-134 and Tu-154 civil airliners that crashed on the evening of August 24, 2004 have been confirmed. Russian security agencies are stepping up their investigation into the situation of the two female passengers who have not yet been identified. Now, the body parts of one of them have been sent to Moscow for identification and analysis for traces of explosives. Traces of explosives were found in the wreckage of Tu-134

Russian Federal Security Service spokesman Ignatchenko said on August 28, 2004 that investigators found the wreckage of the Tu-134 passenger plane that crashed in Tula Oblast, south of Moscow. Traces of explosives were also found. Ignatchenko said that traces of explosives found in the wreckage of the Tu-134 airliner were left by RDX.

So far, traces of explosives have been found in the wreckage of the two passenger planes that crashed in Russia on the evening of August 24, 2004. Ignatchenko announced on August 27, 2004 that experts from the Federal Security Service had found traces of RDX in the wreckage of the crashed Tu-154 passenger plane. Tu-134 Suspicious Person Nagaeva

At the same time, the Russian Federal Security Service and the Ministry of Internal Affairs began to search for terrorists in the passenger lists of the two planes on August 26, 2004. During the investigation on August 28, 2004, two women came into the investigators' sight.

On the afternoon of the 27th, search and rescue personnel discovered some body parts of the 44th Tu-134 victim about 3 kilometers away from the fuselage. The last victim found may be the female passenger Nagaeva. The body parts have been sent to Moscow for identification and analysis for traces of explosives. Volga Airlines also said that Nagaeva's situation was unusual and her relatives did not come to the airline to inquire about the situation. After police investigation, they have learned part of Nagaeva's situation: the name she filled in on the ticket was false, it was Suleymanovna. She was born in Kirov Town, Vegeno District, Chechnya, and later moved to Head to Grozny, the capital of Chechnya. Russian police will continue to investigate her situation. Suspicious Tu-154 figure Debilkhanova

At the crash site of the Tu-154 passenger plane in Rostov Oblast in southern Russia, the identities of 45 of the 46 victims have been confirmed. Relevant Russian personnel concluded that the last unidentified victim may be female passenger Djebilkhanova. Siberia Airlines has no relevant information about her so far. Djebilkhanova was the only passenger among the Tu-154 passengers who was not found by relatives, which cannot but arouse suspicion.

First, on the ticket where she only filled in her surname as Djebilkhanova, her first name only filled in the letter "C", and her place of origin was not filled in either. Second, Djebilkhanova originally purchased a ticket for the IL-86 passenger plane that took off at 9:20 a.m. on August 25. But on the evening of the 24th, she asked the airport ticket office to change her flight to take off at 9:25 that night. Her seat was near the rear of the plane. This location is conducive to placing explosive devices. Third, all the information filled in by Jebilkhanova was untrue.

Siberia Airlines suspected that this was a terrorist incident after the crash because Djebilkhanova's relatives could not be found at all. The Russian State Investigative Committee has written to the Chechen government and internal affairs departments, asking them to assist in investigating the situation of Debilkhanova and Nagaeva. At 3:55 on June 21, 2011, at 23:40 on the night of June 2, 2011 local time, a Russian Rusair Airlines Tu-134 passenger plane crashed. The plane hit the ground and caught fire when it made a forced landing on a road about 1,200 meters away from Petrozavodsk Airport. The aircraft's registration number was RA-65691, flight number 7R-243, and there were 43 passengers and 9 crew members on board. When the plane made an emergency landing, it almost hit a nearby house.

The Russian Emergency Situations Ministry confirmed that 45 people were killed and 7 were seriously injured. These wounded people have been flown to Moscow for treatment on an IL-76 aircraft. 15 doctors and 5 psychiatrists were randomly assigned to provide emergency treatment. The plane's two black boxes have been recovered. According to the meteorological department, it was foggy in the area after 22:00 local time, with visibility of 600 meters.