Anti-Kremlin Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko speaks during the
press-conference in Ukrainian Security Service in Kiev on May 30, 2018.
PHOTO | SERGEI SUPINSKY | AFP
Ukraine admitted Wednesday it had staged the murder of
anti-Kremlin journalist Arkady Babchenko in
order to foil an attempt on his life by Russia, a stunning development in a case that had attracted global headlines.
order to foil an attempt on his life by Russia, a stunning development in a case that had attracted global headlines.
Less than 24 hours
after it was reported that Babchenko had died from three gunshots to the
back in the stairwell of his apartment building in an apparent
contract-style killing, he appeared alive and well at a press conference
in Kiev.
The head of Ukraine's
security service Vasyl Grytsak told reporters that his death was faked
as part of a "special operation" to pre-empt a real plot to kill him.
"Thanks
to this operation we were able to foil a cynical plot and document how
the Russian security service was planning for this crime," Grytsak
added.
News of the "death" of the
prominent Russian war correspondent and former soldier set off a series
of recriminations between Kiev and Moscow, and pictures and flowers had
been laid by mourners at the Russian embassy in Kiev.
Ukrainian
officials led by Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman had accused Russia
of being behind the killing of the Kremlin critic, a charge that Moscow
batted back.
"The Ukrainian prime
minister is already talking about how it was done by Russian secret
services," Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters. "This fashion
of conducting international affairs is very sad."
String of killings
A
number of Kremlin critics have been killed in Ukraine in recent years,
with one gunned down on a Kiev street in broad daylight and another
whose car exploded.
Babchenko, 41,
fought in Russia's two Chechen campaigns in the 1990s and early 2000s
before becoming a war correspondent and author. He repeatedly said he
faced death threats.
He has contributed to a number of media outlets including top opposition newspaper Novaya Gazeta
and is an avid blogger, accusing Russian authorities of killing Kremlin
critics and unleashing wars in Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere.
He
wrote about his experience as a young soldier in the Chechen campaigns
in a book published in English under the title "One Soldier's War".
Babchenko
left Russia in February 2017 after receiving threats, living first in
the Czech Republic, then in Israel, before moving to Kiev.
He has hosted a programme on the Crimean Tatar TV station ATR for the past year.
Babchenko
made a name for himself with his poignant reportages from the
frontlines, including the conflict in eastern Ukraine that has killed
more than 10,000 people.
In recent
years his increasingly bombastic posts pushed the boundaries of good
taste and some of his colleagues and followers stopped reading him on
Facebook.
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