The New Zealand Herald

The man who came back from the dead

Journalist says he staged his death as part of a plan to thwart a plot to kill him

- Dmytro Vlasov and Nataliya Vasilyeva in Kiev

To the gasps, whoops and applause of stunned colleagues, Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko walked into a news conference yesterday, less than a day after police in the Ukrainian capital said he had been assassinat­ed.

Authoritie­s said his death had been staged to foil a plot on his life by Moscow’s security services and one arrest was made. Russia denounced the faked killing as an outlandish attempt at defamation by its neighbour and foe.

Even Babchenko’s wife was unaware of the deception, and the 41-year-old Kremlin critic who fled to Ukraine 15 months ago apologised to her “for the hell she had to go through in the past two days. There was no choice there, either”.

Neither Babchenko nor Ukrainian Security Service chief Vasyl Gritsak gave details of the sting operation or how they made his wife believe he was dead.

Kiev Police Chief Andriy Krishchenk­o had announced Babchenko’s death on Wednesday, saying the journalist’s wife found him bleeding at their apartment building in Kiev but that he died en route to the hospital. Lawmaker Anton Gerashchen­ko, an adviser to the Interior Minister, said the assailant had waited on a staircase in the building and shot Babchenko in the back as he was going to buy bread.

Just hours before the shooting was reported, Babchenko wrote on Facebook that he considered the day a “second birthday” because it was the fourth anniversar­y of his missing a flight on a Ukrainian military helicopter that later was shot down in the conflict between Ukraine and Moscow-backed separatist­s in the eastern part of the country.

At the start of yesterday’s news conference, Gritsak announced the journalist’s murder had been solved and called the day Babchenko’s “third birthday”.

Babchenko, clad in a black sweatshirt, walked into the room as other reporters gasped and exclaimed their surprise, then broke into applause.

“I’m still alive,” an uneasy-looking Babchenko said with a straight face. Then he apologised for the deception. “I know that sickening feeling when you bury a colleague,” he added.

The news conference produced mixed emotions. “I was shocked. But then a feeling of happiness rose up,” said Serhii Nuzhnenko, a freelance journalist.

Babchenko said he was not allowed to go into the details of his false death. He said Ukraine’s law enforcemen­t had been aware of a contract on his head for two months. He said he was approached by the Ukrainian Security Service, or SBU, a month ago.

“The important thing is my life has been saved and other, bigger terrorist attacks have been thwarted,” he said.

It also was unclear why authoritie­s decided to go to such lengths to make it look as if Babchenko was dead.

Gritsak said investigat­ors had identified a Ukrainian citizen who allegedly was paid $40,000 by the Russian security service to organise and carry out the hit. The unidentifi­ed Ukrainian man in turn allegedly hired an acquaintan­ce to be the gunman, he added.

The suspected organiser of the alleged hit plot was detained on Wednesday, Gritsak said, suggesting the bogus killing was aimed at flushing him out, and he showed a video of the arrest.

Killing Babchenko was part of a larger alleged plot by Russian security services, Gritsak said. The Ukrainian man also was supposed to procure large quantities of weapons and explosives, including 300 AK-47 rifles and “hundreds of kilos of explosives”, to perpetrate acts of terror in Ukraine, he said.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said the Ukrainian Government was “fanning anti-Russian hysteria”. “We’re confident our foreign partners and the relevant internatio­nal agencies will draw correct conclusion­s from the whole situation.”

Konstantin Kosachev, head of the internatio­nal affairs committee of the

It is always deeply dangerous for states to play with the facts Christophe Deloire

upper house of the Russian Parliament, compared Ukraine’s actions to Britain accusing Moscow of being behind the nerve gas poisonings of a Russian former spy and his daughter in England. Russia vehemently denies poisoning Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia Skripal.

“The logic is the same — to defame Russia,” Kosachev told the state news agency Tass.

Ukraine also faced a backlash from internatio­nal journalism figures.

“I deplore the decision to spread false informatio­n on the life of a journalist. It is the duty of the state to provide correct informatio­n to the public,” said Deniz Yazici of the media freedom office of the Organisati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

Reporters Without Borders director Christophe Deloire tweeted his “deepest indignatio­n at the discovery of the manipulati­on of the Ukrainian secret services. It is always deeply dangerous for states to play with the facts”.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Arkady Babchenko addresses the media in Kiev after revealing he is very much alive.
Photo / AP Arkady Babchenko addresses the media in Kiev after revealing he is very much alive.

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