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Russia says foiled Ukrainian plot to kill Putin-linked bishop

Shevkunov has been described in media reports as 'Putin's confessor'
Shevkunov has been described in media reports as 'Putin's confessor' - Copyright Philippine Coast Guard (PCG)/AFP Handout
Shevkunov has been described in media reports as 'Putin's confessor' - Copyright Philippine Coast Guard (PCG)/AFP Handout

Russia’s FSB security service said Friday that it had thwarted a Ukrainian-ordered plot to kill Tikhon Shevkunov, a senior bishop in the Russian Orthodox Church with close links to President Vladimir Putin.

Metropolitan Tikhon, often described in media reports as “Putin’s confessor”, is a member of Putin’s advisory council for culture and the arts and has kept up an acquaintance with the Russian leader since the 1990s.

The 66-year-old was appointed Metropolitan of Crimea — a title denoting a senior bishop — after the peninsula’s annexation by Russia from Ukraine in 2014.

He has often been seen in public with Putin and has been touted as a successor to Patriarch Kirill, the Russian Orthodox Church’s most senior figure.

The FSB said that it had arrested a Ukrainian and a Russian man in Moscow on suspicion of planning the attack, and that the men had been “recruited by Ukraine’s GUR intelligence service through Telegram”.

The TASS news agency identified the suspects as Shevkunov’s assistant Denis Popovich and fellow cleric Nikita Ivankovich.

It said the suspects had been given an improvised explosive device in December “to physically eliminate Metropolitan Tikhon” and then leave Moscow with false passports.

They planned to leave explosives in the “living quarters” of Moscow’s Sretensky Monastery while Shevkunov was visiting, TASS said.

Videos posted by Russia’s Zvezda news outlet appeared to show security forces silently restraining one of the suspects and carrying him into a van, while another video showed a suspect lying face-down in a flat wearing handcuffs.

It also shared videos purporting to show the suspects confessing to the crime.

Ukraine made no immediate public comments on the allegations.

Russia, which has been waging an offensive in Ukraine since February 2022, has seen several Russian or pro-Russian figures targeted by attacks over the past three years. 

Most of them have been attributed to Kyiv or claimed by the Ukrainian secret services, the latest being the assassination of General Igor Kirillov in December in Moscow. 

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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