the mysterious death of the murderess and the Ukrainian clue

the mysterious death of the murderess and the Ukrainian clue

In a statement issued Monday, the FSB identified the suspect Tsiganenko, a national of Ukraine born in 1978, who would have collaborated with the alleged perpetrator of the crime, Natalia Vovkwho in the last few hours was apparently found dead in Vienna, Austriaalthough this information, released by the Austrian press, had no official confirmation.

The suspect, whom the press release defines as “another member of a Ukrainian sabotage group”, would have entered Russia on July 30 through Estonia and left a day before the car bombing of Daria Duguina.

According to the investigation of the Russian secret services, Tsiganenko would have provided Vovk with a false license plate of Kazakhstan and would have helped him make an explosive device in a garage in the southwest of Moscow.

In 2022, Duguina, 29, the daughter of the Russian philosopher and writer Alexander Duguinwas subjected to restrictive measures by the United States for her role as director of the website United World International (UWI)which the Treasury Department qualifies as a “means of disinformation”.

The Russian nationalist philosopher Alexander Duguin is considered the thinker who gave ideological support to the justifications of the kremlin to invade Ukraine, although his ties to President Vladimir Putin are unclear. Some Western media describe him as one of the president’s ideological mentors.

The alleged murder of the material author

According to the FSB investigation, the author of the attack was the Ukrainian citizen Natalia Vovk, born in 1979, who arrived in Russia on July 23 with her 12-year-old daughter and rented an apartment in the same building where Duguina lived.

Since then he watched his victim and, after the murder, he left for Estonia with his daughter through the Russian province of Pskov.

The Austrian tabloid Express reported yesterday that Vovk was found dead “with 17 stab wounds on the body and a piece of paper in hand”, citing as a source a message that “spreads like wildfire on Telegram”, according to Sputnik.

The newspaper did not specify the country or city where Vovk was found, and the Austrian Ministry of the Interior told Sputnik he could not confirm the accuracy of the information.

Source: Ambito

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