KNB said on Wednesday it had kept a few individuals from a gathering which arranged "terrorist acts utilizing ad libbed touchy gadgets". One of the suspects had slaughtered himself by exploding such a gadget.
Addressing correspondents on Thursday, KNB head Vladimir Zhumakanov said the six prisoners were Salafists, however added they had no connections to those behind a fatal assault in the city of Aktobe prior this month.
In that episode, around two dozen men depicted by the powers as sympathizers of Islamic State, assaulted weapon stores and a national watchman office, slaughtering seven individuals.
Security strengths killed 18 aggressors, some around the same time and some in the resulting manhunt.
Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has portrayed the Aktobe aggressors as Salafists.
KNB kept the most recent gathering of suspects on June 26 in the town of Balkhash and the town of Gulshat, both in the Karaganda district of focal Kazakhstan. Zhumakanov said they had wanted to do an assault in the same area.
An expected 300 individuals have left the Central Asian country of 18 million to join Islamic State aggressors situated in Syria and Iraq, Kazakh powers say. The oil-rich previous Soviet republic is a transcendently Muslim however mainstream state.
(Reporting by Raushan Nurshayeva; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Michael Perry)
KNB said on Wednesday it had kept a few individuals from a gathering which arranged "terrorist acts utilizing ad libbed touchy gadgets". One of the suspects had slaughtered himself by exploding such a gadget.
Addressing correspondents on Thursday, KNB head Vladimir Zhumakanov said the six prisoners were Salafists, however added they had no connections to those behind a fatal assault in the city of Aktobe prior this month.
In that episode, around two dozen men depicted by the powers as sympathizers of Islamic State, assaulted weapon stores and a national watchman office, slaughtering seven individuals.
Security strengths killed 18 aggressors, some around the same time and some in the resulting manhunt.
Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has portrayed the Aktobe aggressors as Salafists.
KNB kept the most recent gathering of suspects on June 26 in the town of Balkhash and the town of Gulshat, both in the Karaganda district of focal Kazakhstan. Zhumakanov said they had wanted to do an assault in the same area.
An expected 300 individuals have left the Central Asian country of 18 million to join Islamic State aggressors situated in Syria and Iraq, Kazakh powers say. The oil-rich previous Soviet republic is a transcendently Muslim however mainstream state.
(Reporting by Raushan Nurshayeva; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Michael Perry)
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