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About 200 people say goodbye to Daria Dugina in Moscow

Estonia will not share information on income and departures, according to Estonian diplomatic sources consulted by Europa Press.

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About 200 people say goodbye to Daria Dugina in Moscow

Estonia will not share information on income and departures, according to Estonian diplomatic sources consulted by Europa Press

MADRID, 23 Ago. (EUROPA PRESS) -

Relatives, friends and acquaintances of Daria Dugina, daughter of the Russian philosopher Alexander Dugin, who died on Saturday in a car bomb attack, have fired the journalist this Tuesday at a wake held in a room at the Ostankino center in Moscow.

During the ceremony, which was attended by 200 people, the Russian politician Leonid Slutski spoke, as well as the Vice President of the Duma, Sergei Neverov, and the founder and owner of the Tsargrad television channel, Konstantin Malofiv, according to Kommersant.

"She wasn't afraid, really, and the last time we talked to her at the tradition festival, she told me: Dad, I feel like a warrior, I feel like a heroine," her father, Alexander Dugin, said in a statement. ceremony that has lasted about two hours, as reported by the TASS news agency.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday conveyed his condolences to Alexander Dugin, considered one of the president's ideologues, for the "cruel" murder of his daughter, a woman whom the president remembered as "brilliant" and "with a true Russian heart".

Daria Dugina was killed after an explosive device installed under her vehicle exploded. The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) on Monday accused the Ukrainian secret services of preparing and committing this attack and pointed to a woman allegedly on the run to Estonia as the perpetrator.

After this version by the Russian authorities about the murder of the journalist, the Estonian Foreign Minister, Urmas Reinsalu, considered this investigation by Russian intelligence a "provocation", which, according to Reinsaluy, is trying to pressure Tallinn to change its current policy against Moscow.

Estonia has explained, according to Estonian diplomatic sources consulted by Europa Press, that it can share information about people entering or leaving the country as long as they are cases "prescribed by law." Thus, "the Russian FSB's accusation", which came to them through a "Kremlin propaganda channel", "is not one of them".

The alleged person involved in the crime, a Ukrainian citizen named Natalia Vovk Pavlova, arrived in Russia on July 23 along with her twelve-year-old daughter, Sofia Shaban Mijailovna, and would have crossed into Estonia through its border, according to the Russian version. .

Estonia prohibits the entry into the country of those Russian citizens who have Schengen visas issued by Tallinn. Vovk entered the country in a Mini Cooper car with a Donetsk license plate, although it is not clear what type of visa he was carrying.

In fact, the adviser to the Presidency of Ukraine, Mikhailo Podoliak, has already questioned the Russian propaganda of Moscow's "fictional world" on his official Twitter profile, assuring that the Estonian visa has not been found.