Daily Dispatch

Anti-Kremlin journalist back from dead, Ukraine admits set-up

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UKRAINE sought to justify faking the death of an anti-Kremlin journalist who appeared alive and well at a press conference in Kiev less than 24 hours after he was “murdered”, citing an alleged Russian plot to kill him.

Onlookers gasped and applauded as Arkady Babchenko re-appeared on Wednesday, introduced by the head of Ukraine’s security service, who said the murder had been staged in order to foil an attempt on his life by Moscow.

Less than 24 hours earlier, Ukraine said the reporter had died from three gunshots to the back in the stairwell of his apartment building in a contract-style killing in a case that provoked an outpouring of grief and a diplomatic spat.

“Thanks to this operation we were able to foil a cynical plot and document how the Russian security service was planning for this crime,” security service head Vasyl Grytsak said at the press conference.

Grytsak announced authoritie­s had arrested the alleged mastermind of the plot, saying a Ukrainian citizen named only by the initial G had offered to pay a hitman to carry out the killing after being recruited by Russian special forces and paid $40 000 (R502 000).

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko later met Babchenko and wrote triumphant­ly on Facebook that “millions of people are celebratin­g” the journalist’s new lease of life.

The planned attack was “organised from Russian territory” with the aim of “destabilis­ing the situation in Ukraine” and “killing one whom Russia fears most of all”, he said.

“Thanks to Arkady and the Ukrainian security chiefs, for not allowing this scenario to be carried out in our country.”

Anton Guerachtch­enko, an adviser to Ukraine’s interior minister, likened the plot to a story from a crime novel, saying on Facebook that “Sherlock Holmes successful­ly used the method of staging his own death to efficientl­y solve complicate­d crimes”.

But Moscow, later Wednesday, condemned the plot, with the foreign ministry saying “now the true motives are beginning to be revealed for this staging, which is totally obviously yet another anti-Russian provocatio­n”.

Foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said it was “great news” that Babchenko was alive but on Twitter she slammed the “propagandi­stic effect” of the set-up.

Grytsak, during his press conference, thanked Babchenko and his family, who he said were in the loop about the secret operation.

The reporter, however, apologised to his wife for putting her through “this hell she had to live through for three days... but there was no other option”. He later defiantly promised on Twitter to “die at 96 after dancing on Putin’s grave”.

“God, it got so boring being dead,” he wrote. “Good morning.”

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 were laid by mourners at the Russian embassy in Kiev.

Ukrainian officials led by Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman accused Russia of being behind the killing of the Kremlin critic, a charge that Moscow batted back.

Reporters Without Borders also condemned the faked death.

“It is pathetic and regrettabl­e that the Ukrainian police have played with the truth, whatever their motive... for the stunt,” said Christophe Deloire, the head of the Paris-based media watchdog.

And Russian investigat­ive journalist Andrei Soldatov, a former colleague of Babchenko, also questioned the value of the operation.

“To me, it’s crossing a line big time. Babchenko is a journalist not a policeman, for Christ sake, and part of our job is trust, whatever Trump; Putin say about fake news,” he wrote on Twitter.

“I’m glad he is alive, but he undermined even further the credibilit­y of journalist­s and the media,” he added.

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