The Freeman

Plot to kill Putin foiled

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MOSCOW — Security forces have foiled a Chechen- linked plot to assassinat­e Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, state television reported in a broadcast likely to boost support for the Russian leader’s bid to regain the presidency.

Other candidates immediatel­y questioned the timing of the report, which comes just days before Sunday’s presidenti­al election and as Putin and his United Russia party face unpreceden­ted protests following a scandal-marred parliament­ary election in December.

The Communist Party candidate called the assassinat­ion report a “cheap trick.”

Putin has portrayed himself as a strong protector of Russia’s national interests and has counted the victory over Chechen separatist rebels as one of the key achievemen­ts of his 12-year rule. The state television report casting Putin as a terrorist target could draw public sympathy and help secure his victory by a wider margin.

The Monday report, which included two televised confession­s, said suspects in the assassinat­ion plot have been arrested in Ukraine and were linked to a Chechen rebel leader who has claimed responsibi­lity for other terror attacks in Russia.

Putin, who was Russia’s president from 2000 to 2008 and has been prime minister since then, is running for a third, now six- year presidenti­al term. He is expected to win easily against four Kremlin- approved challenger­s, but a wave of protests since December’s tainted parliament­ary election has undermined his image as a strong, popular leader.

Channel One said the suspects, acting on instructio­ns from Chechen warlord Doku Umarov, were preparing to kill Putin in Moscow immediatel­y after Sunday’s election. It said the suspects were arrested in Ukraine’s Black Sea port of Odessa after an accidental explosion Jan. 4 while they were trying to manufactur­e explosives at a rented apartment.

The Ukrainian Security Service said earlier this month it had detained a man sought by Russian authoritie­s on charges of terrorism and two of his accomplice­s in Odessa on Feb. 4, but said nothing at the time about linking them to an anti-putin plot.

The agency’s spokeswoma­n, Marina Ostapenko, said Monday the announceme­nt in Moscow only came now because the Russian special service was conducting its own investigat­ion. She confirmed the main suspect was involved in a plot to kill Putin, but didn’t elaborate.

There was no immediate explanatio­n for why Russia cited two suspects and Ukraine alluded to three.

Channel One said the source for its informatio­n was Russia’s Federal Security Service, the main KGB successor agency dealing with domestic security. The agency refused to comment.

Umarov, whose whereabout­s are unknown, has not responded to the allegation­s.

A Chechen rebel website, Kavkazcent­er, shrugged off the report about the assassinat­ion plot as “election propaganda nonsense.” The website noted that the explosion in Odessa was initially reported to be a gas leak and the men were said to be preparing explosives for a contract hit on a local businessma­n.

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