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Boston bombers’ father returning to US; mother claims terror attack was fake, says blood was ‘paint’

Anzor Tsarnaev

Anzor Tsarnaev (REUTERS)

MAKHACHKALA, Russia — The father of the two Boston bombing suspects said Thursday that he is leaving Russia for the United States in the next day or two, but their mother said she was still thinking it over.

Zubeidat Tsarnaev told CNN that she believed the terror attack was staged, calling it “a show.”

“That’s what I want to know, because everybody’s talking about it — that this is a show, that’s what I want to know. That’s what I want to understand,” she said.

The mother told the network she had watched a video about the conspiracy theory and said she hadn’t seen images from the bombings.

The mother wildly claimed the blood on Boylston Street was paint but then cried for the victims of the brutal blasts.

“I really feel sorry for all of them. Really feel sorry for all of them.”

The parents of Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev returned last year to Dagestan, one of several predominantly Muslim provinces in southern Russia, where they lived briefly before moving to the US a decade ago.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, who was killed in a gun battle with police, spent six months last year in Russia’s Caucasus, which has been ravaged for years by an insurgency led by religious extremists.

His father, Anzor Tsarnaev, said his son stayed with him for three months in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, and spent one month with relatives, but he was unclear on where his son was for the remaining time.

Investigators have been trying to determine whether Tamerlan was radicalized during his stay in the Caucasus, where he regularly prayed at a Makhachkala mosque.

The suspects’ father has expressed a desire to go to the US to find out what happened with his sons, defend his hospitalized 19-year-old son Dzhokhar and if possible bring his older son’s body back to Russia for burial. He told journalists on Thursday that he is leaving “today or tomorrow.”

Their mother, who was charged with shoplifting in the US last summer, said she has been assured by lawyers that she would not be arrested, but said she was still deciding whether to go.

Tsarnaeva said she now regrets moving her family to the US and believes they would have been better off in a village in Dagestan.

“You know, my kids would be with us, and we would be, like, fine,” she said. “So, yes, I would prefer not to live in America now! Why did I even go there? Why? I thought America is going to, like, protect us, our kids, it’s going to be safe.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that the Boston bombings should spur stronger security cooperation between Moscow and Washington, adding that they also show that the West was wrong in supporting militants in Chechnya.

“This tragedy should push us closer in fending off common threats, including terrorism, which is one of the biggest and most dangerous of them,” Putin said during his annual call-in show on state television.

Putin warned against trying to find the roots for the Boston tragedy in the suffering endured by the Chechen people, particularly in mass deportations of Chechens to Siberia and Central Asia on Soviet dictator Josef Stalin’s orders. “The cause isn’t in their ethnicity or religion, it’s in their extremist sentiments,” he said.

The suspects are ethnic Chechens and their father’s family was deported to Central Asia.

Putin criticized the West for refusing to declare Chechen militants terrorists and for offering them political and financial assistance in the past.

“I always felt indignation when our Western partners and Western media were referring to terrorists who conducted brutal and bloody crimes on the territory of Russia as rebels,” Putin said.

The US urged the Kremlin to seek a political settlement in Chechnya and criticized rights abuses by Russian troops during the two separatist wars. It also provided humanitarian aid to the region during the fighting in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Russian officials have claimed that rebels in Chechnya have close links with al Qaeda.

Putin said the West should have cooperated more actively with Russia in combatting terror.

“We always have said that we shouldn’t limit ourselves to declarations about terrorism being a common threat and engage in closer cooperation,” he said. “Now these two criminals have proven the correctness of our thesis.”

Meanwhile, Tamerlan’s widow has not yet said whether she plans a funeral or wants to claim his body.

Katherine Russell’s lawyer, Amato DeLuca, by Thursday had not responded to questions sent through a spokesman the previous day asking whether she plans a funeral for her husband and whether she is in touch with his parents or the medical examiner’s office.

Russell, as Tsarnaev’s wife, would be first in line to claim his body once the Massachusetts medical examiner’s office is done with it.