Berlin: A trial over an execution-style murder in a Berlin city park is likely to further test already strained relations between Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government and the Kremlin.
A panel of five judges began proceedings Wednesday against Vadim K. over allegations that he gunned down a Georgian of Chechen descent at the behest of Russian authorities. The victim, identified as Tornike K., was a militia leader from 2000 to 2004 in the second Chechen war against Russia, according to German prosecutors.
Vadim K., 55, shot Tornike K. in broad daylight in the “Kleiner Tiergarten” park in August last year, according to findings in the case. He was apprehended shortly afterward and has been in custody ever since. Federal prosecutors charged him in June.
The trial is the latest in a series of issues that have soured ties between Berlin and Moscow. It comes after fresh evidence in the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, which may prompt Germany and the European Union to levy sanctions against President Vladimir Putin’s government.
Putin last December denied Russia was involved in the Tiergarten murder but pledged to cooperate with German investigators.
“This man was wanted in Russia,” Putin said about the murdered Georgian. “He was a militant, and a very tough and bloody man.” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday said Russia had no new information about the murder.
Alena Epifanova at the German Council on Foreign Relations said Russia would seek to portray the trial as a campaign against it “steered from abroad.”
“The Russian regime will do everything to look good internally,” Epifanova said. “If the Berlin court finds that the Russian government ordered the murder, diplomatic measures will certainly be taken.”
German prosecutors in June said Russian authorities ordered Vadim K. to “liquidate” Tornike K., who had been living in Germany as a refugee since 2016.
Vadim K. allegedly approached his victim from behind by bicycle, shooting at him with a silencer-equipped Glock 26 pistol, according to the indictment. When Tornike K. fell, Vadim K. stepped toward him and shot him twice in the head, prosecutors say. Tornike K. died on the spot, just a ten-minute walk from Merkel’s office.
Germany expelled two Russian diplomats in December after the Federal Prosecutor’s initial findings in the case. When Vadim K. was charged, Germany signaled it would hold off on taking further action against Moscow until a verdict is reached.
The case echoes the 1997 “Mykonos” trial, when a Berlin court found that the Iranian government ordered the killing of four Kurds in a Greek restaurant in the German capital. It caused a diplomatic crisis between Germany and Iran as the judges made reference to “terrorist attacks” by the Iranian government.
The court has scheduled 25 hearings in the so-called Tiergarten trial until January. -Bloomberg
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