BFF-37 Bulgarians bid farewell to murdered journalist

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BFF-37

BULGARIA-GERMANY-CRIME-MEDIA

Bulgarians bid farewell to murdered journalist

RUSE, Bulgaria, Oct 12, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Hundreds of people turned out
Friday for the funeral of murdered Bulgarian television journalist, Viktoria
Marinova, as authorities said a suspect arrested in Germany would be
extradited soon.

In a case that shocked Bulgaria and drew international condemnation,
mourners bearing flowers and wreaths flocked to the northern town of Ruse to
pay their respects to Marinova, whose body was discovered near a jogging path
next to the Danube last Saturday.

Authorities said the 30-year-old — who leaves a small child — died from
blows to the head and suffocation and had also been raped.

Bulgaria has disputed the immediate assumption by many international
bodies and rights groups that the murder was connected with her work.

A 20-year-old Bulgarian suspect, named as Severin Krasimirov, was tracked
down and arrested in the northern German town of Stade, near Hamburg, on
Tuesday.

And on Friday, a German court said the suspect would “soon” be sent back
to Bulgaria, adding that he had said during questioning “that he did not want
to kill the victim and denied raping her”. But he admitted to having “a
verbal argument with the victim” and “under the strong influence of alcohol
and drugs (he) punched the woman in the face, at which point she fell down.
He then picked her up and threw her in a bush but said he then left the
scene.”

A number of Bulgarian TV channels have broadcast interviews with the
suspect’s mother, Nadezhda Krasimirova, speaking from her home in the German
town of Stade, who said her son had confessed to her the killing and was
about to give himself up when he was arrested.

– No proof of work-related murder –

Bulgaria’s chief prosecutor, Sotir Tsatsarov, said on Wednesday that “at
this stage we do not have proof to consider that the murder was related to
her professional work.”

But he insisted that all possible leads were still being pursued.

“The arrest of the perpetrator does not in any way mean that we will
discontinue working on all possible hypotheses for a motive,” he said. After
a memorial service attended by friends, colleagues and relatives, Marinova
was buried Friday in a small private ceremony in Ruse’s cemetery.

Marinova — who presented a current affairs talk programme on the local
TVN television channel — is the third journalist to be murdered in Europe in
the past 12 months after Jan Kuciak in Slovakia in February and Daphne
Caruana Galizia in Malta in October 2017.

Her last show included interviews with two investigative journalists from
Bulgaria and Romania who had been working on allegations of corruption and
misuse of EU aid.

Nevertheless, Prime Minister Boyko Borisov has dismissed suggestions of a
political motive as a smear campaign.

Bulgaria is regarded as a laggard in the EU in terms of press freedom,
ranking 111th out of 180 countries, according to Reporters Without Borders
(RSF).

BSS/AFP/SSS/1929 hrs