Kuwait Times

Official alleges Russian plot to ‘liquidate’ him

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PRAGUE: A Prague official has alleged that there was a Russian plot to “liquidate” him and two other Czech politician­s, all of whom have clashed with the Kremlin over controvers­ial Soviet memorials in the city. Prague district 6 mayor Ondrej Kolar told Czech media late Tuesday that he was being kept at an undisclose­d location after being granted police protection. “All I can tell you is

that I’ve been granted police protection. It was assigned to me because there’s a Russian here who has been given the task of liquidatin­g me,” Kolar told the Czech Prima TV station. “Not only me, but also Zdenek Hrib and Pavel Novotny,” he added, referring respective­ly to Prague’s mayor and another city official.

Prague mayor Zdenek Hrib said on Monday that he was under police protection, but stopped short of confirming Czech media reports that he had been targeted by Russia for removing a statue of a Soviet war hero. Hrib and Kolar clashed with Moscow earlier this month after they spearheade­d the removal of a controvers­ial Cold War-era statue dedicated to Soviet general Ivan Konev, a move Russian diplomats called an “unfriendly” act of

“vandalism by unhinged municipal representa­tives.” Many Czechs view Konev - a hero for Russians - as a symbol of Soviet-era oppression.

The Czech weekly news magazine Respekt claimed that a Russian national using a diplomatic passport had recently arrived in Prague carrying ricin, a toxic poison that can be used as a biological weapon. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, speaking to reporters in Moscow on Monday, said the claims made in the Respekt report were “misinforma­tion”. Reacting to the developmen­ts, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said Tuesday that his country, an EU and NATO member of 10.7 million people would not allow “any world power to influence our political affaires in any manner”. —AFP

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