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e also indicated they have a connection with Dagestan, another restive Russian region where Islamic militants have gone after Russian targets.The uncle of the suspects told reporters late Friday morning that one of the suspects was in fact born in Dagestan, saying this has "nothing to do with Chechnya" and "Chechens are peaceful people."Craig Albert, an expert on Chechnya and associate professor at Georgia Regents University, said any connection between these suspects and the jihadist movement in Chechnya would have "severe" implications for the U.S.But he also said it might just be "isolated individualized terror" where the suspects are using Chechnya ties to "rationalize" violence.The ties between major Islamic extremist groups and Chechnya, though, are well-documented, particularly pertaining to extremists' support for the separatists in Chechnya.The Taliban, when it was in power, was one of the only governments to recognize Chechnya's independence.An Al Qaeda-tied Chechen warlord named Ibn al-Khattab was, according to the Council on Foreign Relations, said to have met with Usama bin Laden during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. He was killed in 2002 by the Russians.Signs of Islamic radicals fueling unrest in Chechnya continued to surface. According to the report by the George Washington University Homeland Security Policy Institute, foreign fighters have flocked to places like Chechnya, Bosnia and others with a jihadi presence. l, the people of Boston and the families who've lost a piece of your heart, we thank you for your leadership, we thank you for your courage, we thank you for your grace.I'm here today on behalf of the American people with a simple message: Every one of us has been touched by this attack on your beloved city. Every one of us stands with you.Because after all, it's our beloved city, too. Boston may be your hometown, but we claim it, too. It's one of America's iconic cities. It's one of the world's great cities.And one of the reasons the world knows Boston so well is that Boston opens its heart to the world. Over successive generations, you've welcomed again and again new arrivals to our shores, immigrants who constantly reinvigorated this city and this commonwealth and our nation.Every fall, you welcome students from all across America and all across the globe. And every spring, you graduate them back into the world, a Boston diaspora that excels in every field of human endeavor. Year after year, you welcome the greatest talents in the arts and science, research. You welcome them to your concert halls and your hospitals and your laboratories to exchange ideas and insights that draw this world together.And every third Monday in April, you welcome people from all around the world to the hub for friendship and fellowship and healthy competition, a gathering of men and women of every race and every religion, every shape and every size, a
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