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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Analysis: Airport bomb targets Russia's pitch to investors

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(Reuters) - A suicide bombing in the arrivals hall of Moscow's main airport suggests Islamist militants have a new target -- the Kremlin's bid to attract foreign investors.

Monday's attack ripped through crowds at Domodedovo, the country's busiest airport, just two days before President Dmitry Medvedev pitches Russia to the world's business elite at Davos.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev speaks during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg June 18, 2010. REUTERS/Alexander Demianchuk

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev speaks during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg June 18, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Alexander Demianchuk



"On the eve of Davos, the attack appears designed to undermine Russia's objective of becoming an international financial and cultural center," the director of consultancy Eurasia Group, Cliff Kupchan, said in a note to clients.

Medvedev is still due to speak at the investor forum in Switzerland on Wednesday. But the assault on Russia's main port of entry looks calculated to thwart his message. Several foreigners were among the 35 dead and 110 wounded.

"The terror attack will surely be a prominent topic at Davos, and some investors will wonder anew about Russia's safety," Kupchan said. "If the bombing did result from indigenous terror, this attack will cause reputational damage beyond the tragic loss of life."

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the bombing but the attack bore the hallmarks of Islamist militants fighting in the mainly Muslim North Caucasus for a separate state.

Medvedev, who was propelled into the Kremlin's top job in 2008 by his mentor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, is leading a drive to present Russia as a lucrative $1.4 trillion economy that is recovering from crisis and open for foreign investment.

Moscow has lured big names such as British oil major BP and U.S. food and drink giant PepsiCo to make big purchases in Russia over the past two months. More may follow.

But Russian officials had already been fighting an uphill battle to convince investors that endemic corruption, mounds of red tape and patchy rule of law are worth the rewards. Killing and maiming dozens at a major airport makes their jobs harder.

"It will create a perception of danger for Western visitors, as well as being a psychological blow for the Russian population," said analyst Matthew Clements at IHS Jane's in London.

DAMAGED IMAGE?

Aside from increasing concerns for personal safety among would-be investors, it also raises wider questions about the Kremlin's ability to run the world's most extensive country.

Nearly two decades after Chechen separatists first challenged Moscow rule following the collapse of Soviet Communism, and tens of thousands of deaths later, the Kremlin's problems in the mainly Muslim republics of the North Caucasus on Russia's southern flank are, if anything, increasing.

Poverty and radical Islam have inspired many young people. And no matter how much money the Kremlin pours in, or how many security measures are taken, analysts say the Kremlin has achieved very little. Violence is actually spreading.

Insurgency leader Doku Umarov last year vowed to bring his fight to Russia's heartland and to hit the energy and transport infrastructure which pumps the lifeblood of Russia's economy Continue ►

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