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Nanny accused in Russia girl's murder: Allah ordered it

Uzbek woman makes little sense addressing reporters outside court, as prosecutors claim she was "incited" to brutally kill 4-year-old girl

<div class="caption" style="color: rgb(102, 102, 102); margin: 10px 0px; padding-top: 5px; font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; display: inline;"> <p style="margin: 0px 0px 15px; display: inline;">Gulchekhra Bobokulova, a nanny from Uzbekistan, is seen in a court room in Moscow, Russia, March 2, 2016. </p></div> <div class="credit" style="text-transform: uppercase; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: nimbus-sans, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: 700; display: inline;">  </div>

A nanny from Uzbekistan who is accused of killing and decapitating a 4-year-old girl in Moscow was not acting on her own, Russian prosecutors told the court Wednesday.

The 38-year-old woman was spotted outside a Moscow subway station on Monday brandishing the child's head -- a horrific scene that was not covered on Russian state television.

Before a Moscow court approved Gulchekhra Bobokulova's arrest for two months, prosecutors told the court they believe there are individuals who "incited" her to carry out the slaying and they are still at large. The suspect is expected to be charged with murder later this week.

Investigators, however, said earlier that the suspect, who is married, appeared to be mentally unstable.

The motive for the slaying is not known. Bobokulova was the child's nanny, and the child's parents are a middle-class couple, seemingly without government connections or influence.

The nanny's religion was not known but she wore a head covering and some witnesses said she shouted "Allahu akbar!" while waving the bloody head. In videos posted on Russian news websites, she was heard shouting "I am a terrorist!" in Russian.

Asked by a reporter outside the courtroom Wednesday why she killed the child, Bobokulova, who was not wearing a headscarf, replied "Allah ordered me to" as she walked by.

According to the French news agency AFP, she also said to reporters that "Allah sends a second prophet to bring news of peace."

Bobokulova also said, "I'm hungry, I'll die in a week," before proclaiming that it was "the end of the world, I'm not allowed to eat."

None of the main Russian television channels reported on the grisly scene.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman denied that the news was withheld at the request of the Kremlin or out of concerns that the killing could stoke ethnic tensions in a country with many Muslim citizens and migrant workers.

The slain girl's family was apparently from an area a couple hundred miles south of Moscow, but had moved to the capital to try boost their income enough to afford an operation for their four-year-old daughter.

A makeshift memorial outside the family's apartment building continued to grow Wednesday as Muscovites left notes, flowers and toys.

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