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Wednesday, July 20, 2016

journalist, Pavel Sheremet killed in Kiev car bomb

This handout picture taken on Febrauary 27, 2015 in Kiev and released on July 20, 2016 by Ukrainian independent news site Ukrainska Pravda shows Russian journalist Pavel Sheremet who died on July 20, 2016 in a car bomb in central Kiev, with the crisis-hit nation's president demanding the perpetrators are brought to justice. The well-known 44-year-old pro-Western journalist Sheremet, originally from Belarus but a Russian citizen died when an explosion tore through the car he was in. / AFP PHOTO / Ukrainska Pravda / Dmytro LARIN /

A car bomb in central Kiev on Wednesday morning killed well-known pro-Western journalist Pavel Sheremet, with the crisis-hit nation’s president demanding the perpetrators are brought to justice.
The 44-year-old, originally from Belarus but a Russian citizen who worked for Ukrainska Pravda, an independent news site, died when an explosion tore through the car he was in.
The charred car with all the doors open stood on the cobbled street behind a police cordon as investigators worked at the scene, AFP journalists at the scene said.
Pavel Sheremet’s death is the result of an explosive device. It’s murder,” said Prosecutor-General Yuriy Lutsenko on Facebook.

President Petro Poroshenko described his death as a “crime” and a “terrible tragedy,” saying that “the guilty must be punished.”
The interior ministry called Sheremet’s killing a “brazen murder” aimed at destabilising the country.
An aide to the interior minister Zoryan Shkiryak said on Facebook that the explosive device was believed to be the equivalent of 400 to 600 grams of TNT, possibly set off remotely or on a timer.
“All possible scenarios of this cruel crime are being looked into,” Shkiryak said, adding that explosives experts were working at the scene.
A taxi driver who gave his name only as Petro, told AFP that Sheremet “was driving along Ivana Franka street and stopped at the turn and then an explosion went off. The flames from the windscreen went up to the second floor.”
“We rushed to the car and opened the door, he was lying on the floor and groaning. He was in shock from pain and his legs seemed to be broken,” the driver said.
He said that witnesses called for an ambulance and started dragging him out because the car was burning more and more strongly. Sheremet was unable to speak but was moaning from pain. When the amubulance came, he was still alive.
The car he was driving was not his own but belonged to the founding editor at Ukrainska Pravda, Olena Prytula, the news outlet reported.

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