In the days leading up to the Ryazan discovery, a series of bombings had occurred in apartment buildings in Moscow, Dagestan in the North Caucasus, and the southern Rostov region, in which a total of over 300 people were killed and another 200 were injured. The entire country lived in fear, not knowing which building might be targeted next.
By contrast, nobody died in Ryazan, but the events that unfolded there form their own chapter of this story, as they first gave rise to the theory that the Federal Security Service (FSB) was behind the apartment bombings.
While many continue to dismiss this as a conspiracy theory, an increasing number of people believe it should be taken seriously. In either case, the incident in Ryazan remains shrouded in mystery and independent investigators are still attempting to get to the bottom of it to this day.
Sugar or RDX?
On 22 September 1999, Ryazan resident Alexey Kartofelnikov noticed three men dragging sacks out of a van and into the basement of his apartment building. The vehicle’s number plate was partially obscured and the regional code appeared to have been added by hand.
Kartofelnikov called the police, who upon arrival 40 minutes later, found three 60-kilogramme sacks in the basement that contained a substance resembling sugar. A timer and three batteries with wires were also found in the bag. The device was set to go off at 5:30am.
Residents of the building were immediately evacuated to a nearby cinema. Witnesses recall that a bedridden elderly woman was forced to remain in the building as her daughter was unable to find anyone to help evacuate her.
Specialists tested the substance in the sacks and concluded that it was Research Department Explosive (RDX) — a highly explosive substance in white crystal powder form, though it reportedly did not detonate during an explosives test. The sacks were subsequently sent to Moscow “for precise analysis”.