Senior Russian general killed by car bomb in Moscow

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A senior Russian general has been killed in a car bomb attack in Moscow, officials have confirmed.

Russia’s Investigative Committee (SK) – the main federal investigating authority in the country – confirmed Gen Yaroslav Moskalik died when a Volkswagen Golf car exploded after an improvised explosive device stuffed with pellets went off.

Local media reported that the car was parked next to the general’s house in the eastern suburb of Balashikha and exploded as he walked past it.

Moskalik represented Russia’s General Staff in talks with Ukraine in Paris in 2015, which resulted in the Minsk agreements set up to end the war between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatist forces that started in 2014.

According to the Kremlin website, he joined the Russian contingent led by Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Kremlin aide and former Russian ambassador to the US Yuri Ushakov for those ceasefire talks.

Videos and photos circulating on Telegram on Friday show a car in flames outside a block of flats. No one has yet claimed responsibility for the car bomb.

The incident comes as US President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff is expected to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin for talks in central Moscow later on Friday.

Lavrov earlier said Moscow was “ready to reach a deal” with the US to end the Ukraine war, although some elements needed to be “fine-tuned”

Meanwhile, in Ukraine, the mayor of Kyiv, Vitali Klitschko, suggested his country may have to give away territory as part of any peace deal.

Drone attacks on Ukraine continued overnight into Friday.

Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 103 drones, which killed three people, including a child and a 76-year-old woman, in the town of Pavlohrad, in the eastern Dnipropetrovsk region.

Ukraine’s north-eastern city of Kharkiv also came under attack with its mayor, Ihor Terekhov, saying several private buildings were damaged.

Friday’s car explosion is not the first time Russian military figures have been attacked since the start of the war but targeted assassinations in Moscow are rare.

In February this year, Armen Sargsyan, the leader of a pro-Russian paramilitary group in eastern Ukraine, died in hospital after an explosion in the entrance hall of a residential building in north-west Moscow. No one claimed responsibility for that attack.

Last year, a high-ranking general in the Russian armed forces, Lt Gen Igor Kirillov, and his assistant were killed in Moscow by Ukraine’s SBU security service.

Kirillov, head of the Radiation, Biological and Chemical Defence Forces, was outside a residential block when a device hidden in a scooter was detonated remotely, SK said.

An SBU source at the time told the BBC that Kirillov was “a legitimate target” and alleged he had carried out war crimes.


BBC News

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