A top local Russian official survived an assassination attempt that killed his bodyguard near the border with rebel Chechnya on Thursday, a week before the anniversary of the Beslan school siege. Prime Minister Ibrahim Malsagov, 44, was injured in the leg by a blast in the centre of Nazran, the key town in Ingushetia in southern Russia, a spokesman for the republic's emergencies service said.
The blast took place as Malsagov, an Ingush, returned to work after having lunch at home, state television said. Malsagov and three others were rushed to hospital, where the premier's bodyguard died.
Malsagov's wounds were not life-threatening, local officials said. There was an earlier, smaller explosion intended to divert the attention of security forces, the Interfax news agency reported.
Police gave no indication as to who may have been behind the blasts, the second such incident in four days. On Monday, one person was killed and another two injured when a bomb went off near Nazran's main hospital.
Ingush President Murat Zyazikov, himself the target of a failed assassination attempt last year, said the attack was an attempt to destabilise the region and the whole of the North Caucasus, Interfax reported.
Itar-Tass news agency quoted the head of Ingushetia's Interior Ministry as saying criminal elements opposed to the regional administration were to blame.
"Forces unhappy with the positive developments in the republic were behind the attack," Beslan Khamkhoyev said, likening Thursday's attack to a failed assassination attempt on Zyazikov.
But others pointed the finger at separatist guerrillas in neighbouring Chechnya, who have been fighting Russian rule, with one interval, for 10 years.