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The Tribunal for Putin (T4P) global initiative was set up in response to the all-out war launched by Russia against Ukraine in February 2022.

Lesya Gongadze: Nobody wants the investigation complete

04.06.2009   
The mother of murdered journalist Georgy Gongadze believes that the Gongadze caser will not be solved since it is not in anybody’s interests to do so

The mother of murdered journalist Georgy Gongadze believes that the Gongadze caser will not be solved since it is not in anybody’s interests to do so. On Wednesday Reporters without Borders issued a statement saying that “We deplore the lack of political will to solve this murder that has so far been displayed by the Ukrainian authorities.” (see below for the full statement).

In an interview to the Ukrainian Service of Deutsche Welle, Georgy’s mother, Lesya Gongadze said that at present it does not suit anyone to complete the investigation. She added that it was much more advantageous for them to drag it out in order to manipulate it before the elections. “No prominent case has been solved or will be. It just suits some of them to drag this out in order to get publicity”.

With regard to the death of General Edward Fede, an important witness in the case, Lesya Gongadze does not agree with Reporters without Borders that this is a serious blow since he had been in a coma for years and would not have been able to testify anyway.

She called on Ukrainian politicians to not make use of her son’s name on the eve of the Presidential elections.

Three former police officers were convicted last year of carrying out the murder. Their former boss is in hiding, and there is absolutely no progress into the investigation of who ordered the killing

From material here http://dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4301261,00.html

 

RWB: Potential witness’s death deals severe blow to probe into journalist’s murder

Reporters Without Borders regrets that Gen. Edvard Fere, a potential key witness in the investigation into the disappearance and murder of online journalist Georgy Gongadze in 2000, died yesterday in hospital after six years in a coma without ever being questioned by the police.

Gen. Fere, who fell into a coma after suffering a heart attack in 2003, acted as chief of staff for President Leonid Kuchma’s interior minister, Yuri Kravchenko, from 1995 to 2001. He was also a close associate of one of Gongadze’s presumed murderers, former interior ministry intelligence chief Gen. Olexi Pukach, for whom an international arrest warrant has been issued.

“Gen. Fere’s death is a serious blow for the investigation into the Gongadze murder but the judicial authorities have other ways to establish the truth,” Reporters Without Borders said. “We deplore the lack of political will to solve this murder that has so far been displayed by the Ukrainian authorities.”

A 31-year old investigative reporter who had often written often about corruption in President Kuchma’s government, Gongadze was kidnapped from his Kiev apartment building on September 16, 2000. A headless body and a skull found in a forest near Kiev six weeks later were eventually identified as his.

Gen. Fere was suspected of being the intermediary between those who ordered Gongadze’s murder and those who organised its execution, including Gen. Pukach. The prosecutor’s office had made three unsuccessful attempts to question him.

Three former police officers - Mykola Protasov, Oleksandr Popovich and Valeri Kostenko - were convicted last year of carrying out Gongadze’s murder on Gen. Pukach’s orders. Their sentences, 13 years in prison for Protasov and 12 years in prison for the other two, have been confirmed by the supreme court. Gen. Pukach is still a fugitive from justice and is believed to be abroad.

The prosecutor’s office is supposedly still pursuing a second phase of the investigation, consisting of identifying and prosecuting those who ordered Gongadze’s murder. Tape recordings made by the former president’s bodyguard, Mykola Melnishenko, which could compromise very senior former officials, are still awaiting formal examination by an expert.

http://rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=31484

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