Survivors of the attack and the relatives of those killed have always been highly critical of the authorities’ response to the crisis and have for years accused the Russian government of mishandling the attack and the astonishingly violent “rescue operation”.
On Tuesday, Vladimir Putin flew to the North Caucasus after a visit to Azerbaijan, and visited the republics of Kabardino-Balkaria, North Ossetia and Chechnya. He spent around four hours in each region before flying back to Moscow. While his visit to Chechnya had been announced long in advance and was thoroughly prepared for, with virtually the entire republic being locked down in preparation, the residents of Beslan were only informed of Putin’s plan to visit the town the day beforehand. The reason for that was clear: feelings of anger towards the Kremlin and towards Putin in particular run deep among the population, making the people of Beslan far harder to control than those in neighbouring Chechnya.
Since his initial visit to a hospital in Beslan the day after the school was stormed in 2004, until this week Putin had only returned to the city once, visiting Beslan’s cemetery in August 2008 in an unpublicised trip that was only revealed to have taken place over a decade later.