The investigative journalist said the Russians were debating on the Internet how best to kill him.
The lead investigator of the Bellingcat group, Hristo Grozev, said that he did not know on what basis he was placed on the wanted list in the Russian Federation. He has also published in Twitter screenshots of the comments under the news about his wanted, where people are “arguing how best to kill” the journalist.
Grozev wrote that he could not comment on this news until he was familiar with the grounds on which he was placed on the wanted list. However, he added that “it doesn’t matter” because the Russians “have made it clear for years that they fear our work and will stop at nothing to erase it.”
Subsequently, Grozev published screenshots of the comments under the message with the news about his search.
“Commentators under the material I’m looking for are arguing about the best way to kill me: either with a sledgehammer (“as it’s fashionable now”), or with a poisonous umbrella, or just shoot me , “that Bulgarian gipsy”, that “probably Romanian” Oh, the fascist scoundrel that flourished in Russia,” wrote Grozev.

Remember, on the eve it became known that the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia put Hristo Grozev on the wanted list. According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a Bulgarian citizen is wanted on the basis of a criminal case without specifying an article of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation.
Earlier, Hristo Grozev said who was preparing the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It was about 120 officers from the FSB Fifth Service and up to 40 from the GRU, but their predictions turned out to be an illusion.
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Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.