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Ukraine general 'killed reporter' | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A former Ukrainian general suspected of carrying out the high-profile murder of journalist Georgiy Gongadze has reportedly confessed to the killing. | |
A senior police official said Oleksiy Pukach had also implicated senior political figures in the murder. | |
Mr Gongadze's decapitated body was found in a forest in September 2000. | Mr Gongadze's decapitated body was found in a forest in September 2000. |
Three others - all former policemen - were jailed for the murder last year but Gen Pukach remained on the run until his capture on Tuesday. | |
Mr Gongadze was an investigative journalist who had exposed high-level corruption. | |
He knows the name of people who ordered the crime... but it's not that easy to collect all the evidence Myroslava GongadzeJournalist's widow | |
He was abducted in 2000 and his body was found months later. He had been beaten and strangled, his body doused in petrol and burned. | |
Prosecutors allege that Gen Pukach - who was detained near the capital, Kiev - organised the abduction and personally strangled Mr Gongadze. | |
Gen Pukach was the chief of the interior ministry's surveillance department at the time of the killing. | |
Three others were jailed for the murder last year. | |
Mykola Protasov was given a sentence of 13 years, while Valeriy Kostenko and Oleksandr Popovych were each handed 12-year terms. | |
Tape recordings | |
But Mr Gongadze's family has always claimed someone more senior was behind the killing. | But Mr Gongadze's family has always claimed someone more senior was behind the killing. |
His widow, Myroslava, told the BBC's Europe Today programme: "For me and Ukraine it's a very important step in bringing justice to my husband... and generally to society. It's a cleansing process. | |
"He knows the name of people who ordered the crime," she went on. | |
"The thing is, it's easy to mention names, but it's not that easy to collect all the evidence to present in court against instigators and organisers." | |
Secret tape recordings released soon after the killing appeared to implicate the then-President, Leonid Kuchma. | |
In the recordings - made secretly by a member of his personal guard and then released by an opposition politician - Mr Kuchma allegedly discussed ways of removing the journalist, with a former interior minister, Yuri Kravchenko. | |
The latter was later found dead and was said to have committed suicide. | |
Mr Kuchma did not deny the voice in the recordings was his, but insisted it was doctored to make him appear to say things he did not actually say. | |
The scandal prompted massive street protests against Mr Kuchma's government. He was later overturned in Ukraine's Orange Revolution. |