According to Outlet Baza, a Russian news stated that thirty-years old Dugina, had been returning home from a literature and music festival called “Tradition” when the blast occurred. She was reportedly behind the wheel for only 10 minutes before the explosion.
The
daughter of a far-right Russian ideologue commonly known as “Putin’s brain” for
his supposed influence over the Russian president’s fascist views, was
reportedly killed in a car bombing outside Moscow late Saturday.
Images of
the blast were widely circulated on Telegram by the news outlets Baza and 112,
which reported that Darya Dugina, the daughter of Alexander Dugin, was killed
instantly in the explosion. Russia’s TASS news agency cited law enforcement
sources who confirmed that a Toyota Land Cruiser Prado had blown up, but they
did not confirm the identity of the driver, only describing the victim as
female. A man identified by TASS as an acquaintance of Dugina, however,
confirmed that she was killed.
Alexander
Dugin was meant to be in the vehicle his daughter was driving but had gotten in
a different one at the last second, according to Pyotr Lundstrem, a Russian
violinist quoted by the outlet.
Dugin had
reportedly been following right behind his daughter and had watched as her car
exploded. Photos shared by Baza appeared to show Dugin distraught at the scene,
holding his head in both hands as he stood in front of the fiery wreckage.
Denis
Pushilin, the Russian proxy leader of Ukraine's occupied Donetsk, angrily
blamed “terrorists of the Ukrainian regime” for the blast, writing on Telegram
that they had been “trying to liquidate Alexander Dugin” but “blew up his
daughter.”
“In loving
memory of Darya, she is a true Russian girl,” Pushilin wrote.
Pro-Kremlin
Telegram channels and social media pages similarly blamed Ukraine for the
explosion and called on Russians to “avenge” Dugina’s death.
Investigators
are reported to be viewing the explosion as a targeted hit that may have been
meant for Alexander Dugin, a philosopher widely believed to be the chief
architect of Vladimir Putin’s ideology of a “Russian World” and the driving
force behind his aggression against Ukraine.
Darya
Dugina had been outspoken in her support of Russia’s war against Ukraine. As
evidence began to pile up in April of Russian war crimes in the Kyiv suburb of
Bucha, Dugina argued in an interview that the slaughter of civilians had been
staged, bizarrely claiming that the U.S. had chosen the city because in English
the name sounds like “butcher.” She was also sanctioned by the U.S. government
in March in connection with her role in a Kremlin-run influence operation known
as Project Lakhta.
No comments:
Post a Comment