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Spain Detains 2 in Governor's Killing

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  • Spain Detains 2 in Governor's Killing

    Spain Detains 2 in Governor's Killing
    By Nabi Abdullaev
    Staff Writer

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    July 13 2006

    Spanish police have detained two men suspected of killing Magadan
    Governor Valentin Tsvetkov in 2002. Alexander Zakharov, a native of
    the Far Eastern Primorye region, and Martin Babakehyan, a native of
    Armenia, were arrested at the seaside resort of Marbella on July 7,
    Spanish police announced Wednesday.

    Zakharov, 36, and Babakehyan, 35, are the prime suspects in the murder
    of Tsvetkov, who was gunned down in broad daylight on Moscow's busy
    Novy Arbat in October 2002. They were placed on Interpol's wanted
    list in 2003 at the request of the Moscow police.

    Russian authorities said Wednesday that they would send an extradition
    request to Spanish authorities in the next few days.

    Spanish police said the two suspects were carrying fake passports at
    the time of their arrest, although their real passports were discovered
    during a raid of their homes, The Associated Press reported.

    Zakharov and Babakehyan will soon be transferred to Madrid, where
    they will appear before a judge.

    Tsvetkov, governor of the gold-rich Magadan region in the Far East,
    was shot in the head with a pistol around 9 a.m. as he was walking
    to his office in central Moscow. It was the first assassination of a
    governor in post-Soviet Russia. President Vladimir Putin called the
    murder a "crime against the state."

    The first suspect in Tsvetkov's murder, Artur Anisimov, was arrested
    in July 2003. Anisimov was convicted the following year on an unrelated
    fraud charge and sentenced to three years in prison. The murder charge
    against him has not been dropped, however.

    Moscow police proceeded to issue international warrants for another
    five suspects in 2003, a police spokesman said Wednesday.

    The second suspect, Azeri native Masis Ahunts, was arrested in
    Vladivostok in December 2004. He remains in detention awaiting trial.

    With the arrest of Zakharov and Babakehyan, only two of the six
    suspects now remain at large. A spokesman for the Prosecutor General's
    Office declined to name the two outstanding suspects pending the
    outcome of an ongoing investigation. But the list released by Moscow
    police contains the suspects' names: Yury Rashkin and Konstantin
    Korshunov.

    In 2003, then-Interior Minister Boris Gryzlov, who oversaw the
    investigation, said that the murder was related to Tsvetkov's
    distribution of fishing quotas among competing companies in the
    region. Investigators have also suggested that the murder might have
    resulted from Tsvetkov's attempts to force gold-mining companies
    in the region to repay a multimillion-dollar loan provided by the
    federal government in 1995.

    Although the names of the men who pulled the trigger in the Tsvetkov
    case were released to the press a few months after the investigation
    began and were subsequently confirmed on numerous occasions by law
    enforcement officials, the identity of the person who ordered the
    hit has never been made public.
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