The New Zealand Herald

Investigat­ive reporter dies in fall

Friends are suspicious about the death

- Alec Luhn

Friends of a journalist who reported on Russia’s “shadow army” in Syria have raised suspicions about his death falling from a balcony as local authoritie­s insisted there were no indication­s of foul play.

Maksim Borodin, 32, died on Monday from injuries sustained in a plunge from his five-storey balcony in Yekaterinb­urg, Russia’s fourthlarg­est city, on April 12.

He had reported extensivel­y for the news service Novy Den about the deaths of Russian mercenarie­s from the secretive Wagner group in US airstrikes in Syria in February. While Vladimir Putin’s Government admitted Russians had died, it insisted they were private citizens, despite mounting evidence that the Wagner group has served as the Defence Ministry’s de facto shock troops in Syria.

“There are no grounds for launching a case,” the regional investigat­ive committee told the Tass state news agency, in reference to Borodin’s death. “Several versions are being considered, including that this was an unfortunat­e accident, but there is no sign a crime has been committed.”

A friend of Borodin, however, said that the authoritie­s had so far failed to look into the odd circumstan­ces of his death.

According to local activist Vyacheslav Bashkov, Borodin had called on April 11 and asked for help finding a lawyer, saying masked, armed men on his balcony and in the stairwell were preparing to raid his flat.

He called several lawyers and journalist­s, but Borodin later phoned back and said he had been mistaken, and it had probably been a security exercise.

After he heard his friend was in the hospital, Bashkov told the police about the call, but he said they didn’t question him further. Police haven’t contacted the lawyers and journalist­s he had called, he added. “I think it’s suspicious that those who spoke with Borodin the day before April 12 haven’t been questioned. And of course many think that Maksim’s death could have been linked to his publicatio­ns about Syria and the Wagner private military company, but we can’t assert anything until after the results of the preinvesti­gation probe have been announced.”

Another friend of Borodin, Paulina Andreyevna, said the week before his fall, he was treated in a hospital after unknown assailants attacked and hit him in the head as he left his flat block. He had also been assaulted in October.

She didn’t believe his death was an accident or suicide. Borodin planned to leave Yekaterinb­urg in May to move to either Kurgan, where he had been offered a job as editor of a local media outlet, or Moscow, where his fiancee was working, she said.

“I don’t think it was an accident. He was always getting into scrapes because he loved crime news,” she said, referring to his reporting on local criminal activity.

The believed leader of the Wagner group is an employee of Yevgeny Prigozhin, “Putin’s chef” who was indicted by US investigat­ors in February for running a troll factory that interfered in the 2016 election.

 ??  ?? Maksim Borodin
Maksim Borodin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand