Moscow trembles again: violence takes hold in the streets
It seems that in the Russian capital they have decided to change fireworks for real explosive devices. This Wednesday, Moscow’s routine was interrupted, once again, by a detonation that took the lives of three people. The macabre detail? Two of them were law enforcement agents who, in a fit of professional zeal, approached to interrogate a “suspicious subject.” The reward for their diligence was, according to Investigative Committee spokesperson Svetlana Petrenko, an explosion that sent them and an unfortunate passerby to a premature meeting with their fate. Forensic experts should be beginning to consider applying for a permanent office in the area.
The irony, or rather the sinister coincidence, is that the event occurred in the same area where, just on Monday, a lieutenant general named Fanil Sarvarov decided that traveling by car was overrated. An explosive device placed under his vehicle was responsible for giving him a posthumous promotion. Sarvarov was not just any soldier; He was the head of the Operational Training Directorate of the General Staff. You would think that a man with that resume would know how to avoid an attack, but apparently the manual did not cover that chapter.
A worrying pattern and the usual accusations
So, let’s do the math: in just over 48 hours, two explosions in the same area and several deaths, including a high-ranking military commander and now two police officers. Simple bad luck or a message written with gunpowder? The Russian authorities, in a plot twist that no one saw coming, have already hinted that Ukraine could be behind this latest episode. Because, of course, in today’s complex geopolitical situation, what better way to destabilize a rival than by eliminating generals and traffic agents on their own streets? It is the third assassination of a senior commander in just over a year, a statistic that no military leader would want on his resume.
The atmosphere in Moscow must be more charged than the device that killed the general. As Russian investigators search for clues in the rubble, ordinary citizens wonder if going out to buy bread has become a high-risk activity. The official narrative points to a sabotage campaign orchestrated from abroad, a theory that conveniently justifies any future security measures, no matter how draconian. Meanwhile, life, or what’s left of it, continues in a city where the sound of an explosion is beginning to be as routine a concern as traffic.
What’s next? Security reinforcements at every corner? Curfews? Or maybe, just maybe, an uncomfortable reflection on the capacity of the agencies themselves to guarantee security at the heart of power. For now, the only ones who give explanations are the spokespersons, and the only ones who receive them are the citizens, who see how their citizen security vanishes in smoke and rhetoric.
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