Germany expels two Russians over killing of Georgian in Berlin

Germany has expelled two Russians working at the
Russian embassy in Berlin after federal prosecutors took over the case of a
Georgian citizen killed in August in Berlin, saying they had concluded that
evidence suggests involvement either by the government of Russia or the Chechen
republic.
The German foreign ministry said it was responding
in this way because Russian authorities had not cooperated in investigations
into the murder.
Zelimkhan Khangoshvili was shot in broad daylight in
a Berlin park in August. The Kremlin has categorically denied its involvement,
but the Russian government’s unwillingness to illuminate the case has raised
suspicions.
Russia’s foreign ministry promised a response to
Wednesday’s move by Germany, which it described as unfriendly and unfounded.
The assassin who shot 40-year-old Khangoshvili in
the Kleiner Tiergarten park on 23 August was arrested by police while trying to
dispose of the presumptive murder weapon into a canal, but has refused to
cooperate during questioning.
The hitman had travelled to Germany on a Russian
passport issued in the name of Vadim Sokolov, but experts have questioned the
authenticity of the document.
Khangoshvili, an ethnic Chechen from Georgia’s
Pankisi Gorge, was part of the separatist insurgency against Russian forces in
Chechnya. The killing fits a pattern of hits on former Chechen insurgents in
several cities that have often had signs of Russian state involvement.
Such a move would amount to the German state
officially accusing the Kremlin of carrying out a political assassination on
German soil and likely lead to a similar diplomatic fallout as over the
poisoning of Sergei Skripal in the UK in March 2018.