Discovering and neutralizing Shoigu’s assassination plot
A Russian newspaper wrote: The attempt of a group of saboteurs affiliated with the Ukrainian intelligence services to assassinate Sergei Shoigu, the secretary of the Russian Security Council, failed.
According to RCO News Agency, the “Moscow Komsomolets” newspaper wrote that this saboteur group planned to assassinate Shoigu while attending the funeral of one of his relatives in a cemetery in Moscow, but failed.
On November 14, the Russian Federal Security Service announced that it had foiled a terrorist attack against a senior Russian official, according to the Bulgarian News site Facti.
According to the plan, a bomb was to be detonated at the graves of Shoigu’s relatives in a Moscow cemetery using a video camera hidden in a flower pot. Three accomplices of this sabotage group were arrested in this conspiracy, including two Russian couples and an immigrant from a Central Asian country.
Also, the Federal Security Service of Russia discovered and confiscated the pot before this sabotaging group could carry out its plan.
One of the detainees said during the interrogation that he placed this flower pot on an unknown grave and planned to fill it with explosives later.
One video shows a recorded phone conversation between an organizer and one of the men hired to prepare the attack.
The unknown person says: “There is no vase? I wonder what else is out there, what else is around? Absolutely nothing? “Yeah, I get it, okay.” Then he tells them in a muffled voice to leave.
The main designer of this assassination plan is a person named “Jalaluddin Shamsov” who is now living in Ukraine. He is being prosecuted in Russia for murder and illegal possession of firearms.
He is accused of being involved in the murder of Marat Kaptsov, a businessman from the Republic of Bashkiristan, who was shot dead in March 2016.
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