Flowers for Daria Duguina in Moscow. Photo by Reuters
Natalia Vovk, the alleged author of the attack that ended the life of Daria Duguina, daughter of the Russian philosopher Alexandr Duguin, indicated as close to President Vladimir Putin, was found deadthe Austrian press reported today.
the tabloid newspaper To express he cited as a source a message that “spread like wildfire on Telegram,” according to Russian news agency Sputnik.
“At night they found her dead in a rented apartment, with 17 stab wounds to the body and a piece of paper in his hand“says the message and adds photographs allegedly showing the murdered woman.
The newspaper did not specify the country or city where Vovk was found..
The Austrian Interior Ministry told Sputnik could not confirm accuracy of the information published by Express.
Austria does not know
“After consulting with our colleagues in the Directorate for State Security and Intelligence (DSN), we can inform you that such a case is not known in Austria; therefore, we cannot confirm the accuracy of this information, “the ministry’s press service told the Russian agency.
Daria Duguina, 29, died on the 20th of this month on the outskirts of Moscow, after detonating an explosive device put in his car, in which his father was also supposed to travel, who at the last moment decided to change vehicles.
According to the investigation of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), the perpetrator of the attack was Ukrainian citizen Vovk, born in 1979.
The FSB revealed that Vovk arrived in Russia on July 23 with her 12-year-old daughter and rented an apartment in the same building where Duguina lived.
From then on he would observe his victim and, after the murder, he went to Estonia with his daughter through the Russian province of Pskov.
Express also noticed this “There is still no sign of your daughter.”
Dugin promotes Russia as a religious and Christian countryof traditional values and paternalistic leadership, and scorns the liberal values of the West.
United States of America
Duguina expressed similar views as a commentator for the Russian nationalist TV channel Tsargrad.
In March it had been sanctioned by the United States for his work as editor-in-chief of United World International, a website that Washington accuses of spreading disinformation and pro-Russian propaganda.
In announcing the sanctions, the United States quoted an article from him this year in which it stated that Ukraine would “die” if it joined NATO.
Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24 after the United States rejected Putin’s demands to shelve the former Soviet republic’s NATO membership plans, something Moscow has seen for decades as a threat to its security and a “red line” that no one should cross.
Source: Telam
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Source: Clarin