Three people injured when a taxi drove into pedestrians in central Moscow will be released from hospital in coming days, state news agency RIA cites a city health official as saying.
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Moscow police say initial investigations indicate the driver had fallen asleep at the wheel, swerving into pedestrians near the Kremlin on Saturday. Seven people were injured, including two Mexicans visiting the city for the soccer World Cup, which Russia is hosting.
Russia, increasingly isolated on the world stage, is keen to use the tournament to project an image of stability and strength. Authorities have vowed a safe event, and any security incidents involving fans could jeopardise Russia's efforts.
Video of the incident posted on social media showed a yellow taxi pull sharply out of a line of stationary traffic, accelerate and mount a narrow pavement, knocking over several people.
Three of the injured remain in hospital in stable condition and will soon be discharged, RIA cited Alexei Khripun, head of the Moscow city health department, as saying on Sunday.
Others who were injured had already been discharged, Khripun said, according to RIA.
Moscow's streets were still packed with people after the incident on Saturday, listening to street musicians perform or sitting at pavement cafes.
The taxi driver, whose licence was issued in the predominantly Muslim ex-Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan, according to the Moscow traffic management authority, said he had accelerated by accident after working a 20-hour day.
"I regret very much.... I wanted to go home afterwards, to have a sleep," the driver said in a video published by Moscow police.
A criminal investigation has been opened, police said. A court will hold a sentencing hearing on Monday, TASS reported.
The Moscow traffic authority said it identified the driver from his licence as Chingiz Anarbek Uulu, 28, from the town of Kochkor-Ata in Kyrgyzstan, near the border with Uzbekistan.
Chingiz's brother, Almaz Anarbekov, told Reuters that Chingiz was an experienced driver and an award-winning kickboxer who had travelled to Moscow around eight months ago to earn money to fund the construction of his house.
Anarbekov said he was in touch with his brother's wife, who lives in Moscow, where she works as a cook at an Asian restaurant. They have two daughters.
The Kyrgyz embassy said its lawyers were also at the police station at the time.
Australian Associated Press