Two people have been detained following a shootout in Dagestan.

THIS MATERIAL (INFORMATION) WAS PRODUCED AND DISTRIBUTED BY FOREIGN AGENT MEMO LLC, OR CONCERNING THE ACTIVITIES OF FOREIGN AGENT MEMO LLC.

A shootout occurred on the grounds of a former school in the village of Tarki, resulting in the death of one participant and the wounding of two others. Two defendants in a criminal case opened in connection with a conflict have been taken into custody.

Two people have been arrested in Dagestan following a shootout on the grounds of a former school.

On June 24, in the village of Tarki, a conflict erupted between several local residents. During the conflict, one of the participants fired a non-lethal pistol at a 21-year-old opponent, wounding him, Kommersant reported on June 27.

According to investigators, the conflict continued some time later. Two more of the participants sustained gunshot wounds; one died at the scene, and another was taken to a hospital.

A criminal case has been opened on the grounds of crimes under paragraph "i" of Part 2 of Article 105 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder committed for hooligan motives) and Part 3 of Article 30. "a" and "i" of Part 2 of Article 105 of the Russian Criminal Code (attempted murder of two persons committed out of hooligan motives) and Part 2 of Article 213 of the Russian Criminal Code (hooliganism committed with the use of a weapon).

Previously, "Caucasian Knot" reported that on the evening of March 30, an attempt to stop a conflict in the village of Nizhniy Dzhengutai in the Buinaksk District of Dagestan resulted in injuries to two Ministry of Internal Affairs officers. The shooter was detained. Later, the republic's Ministry of Health reported that three people were injured in the shootout. After security forces interviewed witnesses in the case of the shootout in the village of Nizhniy Dzhengutai, an elderly man died, and a young man who was at the scene of the shootout committed suicide.

We've updated our apps for Android and IOS! We appreciate your feedback and development ideas both on Google Play/App Store and on KU's social media pages. Without installing a VPN, you can read us on Telegram (in Dagestan, Chechnya, and Ingushetia – with a VPN). Using a VPN, you can continue reading "Caucasian Knot" on the website as usual, and on social networks Facebook*, Instagram*, "VKontakte", "Odnoklassniki" and X. You can watch the "Caucasian Knot" video on YouTube.

* Meta (owner of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp) is banned in Russia.

Source: https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/424464