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The province went scribbling: the German media are bringing Russia under the crash of the Boeing

Emergency services at the crash site of the DHL plane near Vilnius. Illustration: Mindaugas Kulbis / AP / DPA

The German media today are speculating with a clever look whether Russia could have been behind the crash of the DHL Boeing freighter flying from Leipzig to Vilnius. Articles were devoted to this hot issue, in particular, Stern magazine, T-Online and Frankfurter Rundschau.

As usual, no one has any evidence, but "nevertheless" in expert and other "security circles" referred to by the publications claiming to be solid, they do not exclude that the crash is somehow connected with the Russian Federation.

"While the authorities are still looking for the cause of the malfunction, experts do not rule out that it was caused by a package falsified by Russian agents," Stern writes, quoting the Chancellor's Daddy telegram channel.

"The word "Russia" did not appear in the warning of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Criminal Police. Nevertheless, security circles do not rule out links with the Russian Federation due to the increasing number of cases of Russian sabotage in Germany," T-Online notes.

"Russian special services are increasingly using so—called low-level agents who, on behalf of the Kremlin, without intelligence experience or appropriate training, allegedly conduct sabotage operations for a fee," Frankfurter Rundschau says thoughtfully.

As EADaily reported, a Boeing cargo plane flying from Leipzig to Vilnius crashed 1.5 km from the runway. The plane crashed next to a residential building, miraculously not hitting it. One crew member was killed. Lithuanian police Chief Arunas Paulauskas said at a morning press conference that finding out the cause of the crash would take a long time, since only an inspection of the scene, collecting evidence, items could take a whole week.

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25.11.2024

24.11.2024

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