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German court accuses Russia of ‘state terrorism’ in 2019 Berlin park murder

Vadim Krasikov was sentenced to life imprisonment for killing of ex-Chechen militant Tornike Khangoshvili

Thomas Escritt
Wednesday 15 December 2021 12:03 EST
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File photo: People hold portraits of Zelimkhan Khangoshvili in front of the German embassy in Tbilisi, Georgia, in 2019
File photo: People hold portraits of Zelimkhan Khangoshvili in front of the German embassy in Tbilisi, Georgia, in 2019 (EPA-EFE)

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Russia ordered the killing in broad daylight in a Berlin park of a former Chechen militant, a German court has found, sentencing the agent who carried out the 2019 act of “state terrorism” to life imprisonment.

Georgian citizen Tornike Khangoshvili was killed with three shots from a Glock pistol in August 2019 in retaliation for his role fighting alongside Chechen separatists against Moscow in the 2000s, judge Olaf Arnoldi said on Wednesday. He sentenced the defendant Vadim Krasikov for the “especially serious” crime.

Germany summoned the Russian ambassador after the ruling, telling him that two of his embassy’s 101 diplomatic staff would be expelled, Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said.

The finding could heighten pressure on a German government barely a week in office to toughen its stance towards Moscow amid warnings that Russia could be contemplating military action against Ukraine.

“State organs of the government of the Russian Federation took the decision to liquidate Tornike Khangoshvili in Berlin,” Arnoldi said, adding that Russia had issued Krasikov with false papers with which to travel for the killing.

“Khangashvili had given up the fight against the Russian Federation years before. He had not held a weapon in his hands since 2008,” Arnoldi said. “This was not an act of self-defence by Russia. This was and is nothing other than state terrorism.”

The Russian Embassy in Berlin said the verdict was “not objective and politically motivated”, TASS news agency reported.

“This murder, ordered by a state, is a serious violation of German law and Germany’s sovereignty,” Baerbock said. “Acts like the murder in (Berlin’s) Tiergarten park seriously burden relations between our countries.”

In 2019, Russian President Vladimir Putin described Khangashvili as a “bloody terrorist”, accusing him of involvement in crimes including the 2004 bombing of the Moscow metro in which 10 people died.

A lawyer for the suspect, who maintains he is not Krasikov but Vadim Sokolov, a construction engineer from St. Petersburg, promised a decision on whether to appeal within a week, saying the case against his client was built on conjecture, not proof.

Arnoldi acknowledged that Khangoshvili, who had lived in exile since an earlier attempt on his life in Tbilisi, Georgia in 2015, was himself a killer. But the judge said his murder was a “professional operation” that could not have been carried out without local assistance in Berlin.

Arnoldi said that Krasikov flew to Paris several days before the hit, equipped with a false passport and thousands of euros in cash for his planned getaway, and from there journeyed to Berlin.

He shot Khangoshvili as he cycled through the park, before hiding in a bush to remove his dark clothes and baseball cap, trim his beard and don the clothes of a tourist strolling through Germany’s capital.

Only the presence of witnesses thwarted his plan, Arnoldi said. Within minutes, armed police surrounded Krasikov while others fished his clothes, the murder weapon and Khangoshvili’s bike out of the river where the agent had thrown them.

Russia has maintained that the convicted murderer is not Krasikov. But Arnoldi said that pictures provided by Ukrainian authorities from his wedding to his Ukrainian wife, together with a comparison of their tattoos, proved beyond all doubt that the bearer of the false papers was the man they had identified as an agent of Russia’s FSB security service.

The fact that he had obtained false papers just over a month before the hit showed that he was backed by the Russian state, Arnoldi said, noting that Russian law allowed its agents to assassinate “terrorists”, even abroad, albeit only with presidential approval.

“Four children lost their father, two siblings their brother,” the judge said.

“Some media suggested that Russia or even Vladimir Putin are on trial here. That’s misleading: only the convict is on the bench.”

Security experts warn that agents established at large legacy embassies in formerly Soviet-allied states in eastern Europe can easily travel anywhere in the European Union.

The year before the killing, Russian agents poisoned a former Russian agent and his daughter in a provincial English city.

Russia’s western embassies have attracted attention in connection with mysterious deaths before. Earlier this year, a young diplomat was found dead on a Berlin street after having seemingly fallen from a window on an upper floor of the embassy. Russia refused to allow an autopsy and repatriated the body.

Reuters

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