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Child's beheading was act of revenge against Russian president, claims nanny

Gulchekhra Bobokulova from Uzbekistan appearing in a court room in Moscow, Russia. Picture by Vladimir Kondrashov, APTN via Associated Press
Gulchekhra Bobokulova from Uzbekistan appearing in a court room in Moscow, Russia. Picture by Vladimir Kondrashov, APTN via Associated Press Gulchekhra Bobokulova from Uzbekistan appearing in a court room in Moscow, Russia. Picture by Vladimir Kondrashov, APTN via Associated Press

A NANNY accused of decapitating a four-year old girl in Moscow has said during an apparent interrogation that the killing was an act of revenge against President Vladimir Putin for Russian air strikes in Syria.

Mr Putin's spokesman said it was difficult to judge the testimony of a woman he said was mentally unstable.

Gulchekhra Bobokulova was detained in Moscow on Monday. She is accused of killing the child and brandishing her head outside a subway station.

Video footage posted online appeared to show police interrogating her.

It was not clear where the video originated. The woman appeared to be wearing the same clothes she wore during a court appearance on Wednesday.

In the video, she says the killing of the child was revenge.

Asked who it was revenge against, she says "the one who has spilled the blood".

Asked who that was, she replies: "Who spilled it? Putin has been dropping bombs."

Russia has been carrying out air strikes against Islamic State (IS) fighters in Syria for five months to support President Bashar Assad's offensive.

Russian officials have flatly denied numerous reports by international aid groups that accuse it of killing not only IS fighters but also civilians.

The Investigative Committee, Russia's top investigative agency, would not confirm or deny the authenticity of the video, but spokesman Vladimir Markin warned in a statement that Bobokulova's words should be treated with caution.

"The motive for a crime committed by a person who was diagnosed with schizophrenia often does not coincide with the explanations that they give later," he said, adding that investigators will look into all possible theories.

Russian media has reported that Bobokulova, originally from the former Soviet republic of Uzbekistan, was first diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2003. She has not yet undergone a psychiatric examination in Russia.

Mr Markin refuted reports that investigators found phone numbers of Islamic extremists in Bobokulova's contacts.

Russian prosecutors told a court on Wednesday that Bobokulova was not acting alone and that others they did not name had incited her to kill the girl.

In the video, she tells investigators that she reads the Koran and prays day and night, but that they can go and kill her three children in Uzbekistan, who do not read the Koran.

A spokesman for Mr Putin said it would be wrong to draw conclusions from the video.

He said: "It appears obvious to me, although I may be wrong, I'm not an expert or judge, that we are evidently talking about a woman who is clearly deranged.

"Any words that come from such a deranged woman should be treated like they should be in this situation."