Russian secret services identify a Ukrainian citizen as an alleged accomplice in the murder of Daria Dugina

- Moscow claims that Bogdan Tsyganenko gave false documents and material to the main suspect.

Russian secret services identify a Ukrainian citizen as an alleged accomplice in the murder of Daria Dugina
Alexander Dugin with his daughter Daria Dugina at the Tradition festival, before the attack.

Russian secret services identify a Ukrainian citizen as an alleged accomplice in the murder of Daria Dugina

The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB, former KGB) reported on Monday that a second Ukrainian citizen, identified as Bogdán Tsiganenko, participated in the bomb attack that killed Russian journalist Daria Dúguina. According to the FSB, which previously pointed to the Ukrainian Natalia Vovk as the material author of the murder, her alleged accomplice entered Russia on July 30 and left the country a day before the attack, perpetrated on the 20th.

Tsiganenko "provided Vovk with false car license plates and documents in the name of Yulia Zaiko, a real citizen of Kazakhstan, and together with Vovk manufactured the homemade explosive device in a rented garage in southwestern Moscow," the FSB statement released. by Russian agencies. In addition, the security services released video images of Tsiganenko's entry into the country, as well as at the wheel of the car that Vovk was driving in Moscow and in which she left Russia together with her daughter the day after the attack.

According to the FSB, Vovk arrived in Russia on July 23 together with her 12-year-old daughter, Sofia, and rented an apartment in the same apartment building where Dúguina lived. The journalist died when a bomb exploded in the underside of her vehicle while she was driving on a highway on the outskirts of Moscow.

The Russian authorities accused the Ukrainian secret services of being behind the attack, an extreme that the Kyiv government flatly denied. Thousands of Muscovites attended the wake of Dúguina, who was posthumously awarded the Order of Valor by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Putin called the murder of the 29-year-old young woman, who worked as a journalist, political scientist, and spokesperson for her father, the ultra-nationalist philosopher Alexandr Duguin, one of the leaders of the Eurasianist movement, a "vile and cruel" crime.

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