A seven-strong suspected terror cell who are alleged to have been plotting attacks over the New Year period under orders from Isis, have been arrested in Russia.

The group were preparing to attack crowded places in Moscow, according to the FSB - Russia's domestic security and counter-terrorism agency.

Agents detained the suspects in the North Caucasus province of Dagestan, the agency said in a statement.

It added that they also seized "a large quantity of firearms and weapons (grenades and ammunition), as well as components for IEDs".

The arrests are thought to have taken place in Makhachkala, the restive region's capital.

Dagestan, which translates as "land of the mountains", is situated in Russia's turbulent North Caucasus with Chechnya and Georgia to the west, Azerbaijan to the south and the Caspian Sea to the east. It is around 100 miles closer to Iraq than it is to Moscow.

Islamic militants have repeatedly called and fought for independence from Moscow in the hope of establishing an Islamic Caliphate across the North Caucasus

As a result the republic has seen numerous bombings targeted at the Russian military stationed in the republic.

The FSB claimed to have killed the leader of the North Caucasus’s Isis branch, Rustam Magomedovich Aselderov, in Dagestan earlier this year.

Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within Show all 4 1 /4 Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within 474666.bin Metro bomber Dzhennet Abdurakhmanova, 17, and husband Umalat Magomedov GETTY IMAGES Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within 474667.bin Madomedali Vagabov, thought to have planned the Metro attacks, right, with an unknown gunman AP Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within 474668.bin Russian special police in Makhachkala search bodies GETTY IMAGES Dagestan: Russia's Islamic enemy within 474669.bin The bodies of suspected separatists in Kaspiysk, Dagestan, last month GETTY IMAGES

The militant, also known as Abu Muhammad, pledged allegiance to Isis in 2014 and was wanted over a 2013 terrorist bomb attack in Volgograd that killed more than 30 people.

President Vladimir Putin has since said that thousands of Russian citizens and people in other ex-Soviet nations have joined Isis in Syria, where his country has waged an air campaign since September 2015.

Russian forces have targeted rebel and terrorist strongholds, in support of President Bashar al-Assad.