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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko lays flowers on the coffin containing the body of journalist Pavel Sheremet, who was killed by a car bomb, during a memorial service in Kyiv on July 22.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko lays flowers on the coffin containing the body of journalist Pavel Sheremet, who was killed by a car bomb, during a memorial service in Kyiv on July 22.

KYIV -- Thousands of mourners strode in a solemn procession through Kyiv’s Ukrainian House on July 22 to honor journalist Pavel Sheremet, who was killed in a car bombing that has shaken Ukraine’s media community and sent shock waves into Russia and Belarus.

Sheremet, a journalist at news website Ukrayinska Pravda, was driving to a radio station to do a morning show two days earlier when the bomb exploded. The Interior Ministry said the explosives were “skillfully” planted underneath the car and that the blast may have been set off by a “remote-controlled or delayed-action” detonator.

Surveillance footage showing what media reports said was the placement of a bomb under the car the night before the blast was posted on the Internet, but there was no word on suspects or a specific motive. Colleagues believe Sheremet was targeted for his work as a journalist.

Europol and the FBI are assisting Ukraine in investigating Sheremet’s slaying.

“We never thought something like this would happen,” Nataliya Humenyuk, co-founder of the independent Hromadske.tv channel and a friend of Sheremet, told RFE/RL as she stood beneath a giant photograph of him smiling and flashing a peace sign.

Most of those paying their last respects to Sheremet were Ukrainians, but there were also Russian and Belarusian citizens in attendance. The 44-year-old had previously worked in Russia and his native Belarus, where he faced pressure from the authorities for his reporting.

A mourner pays tribute near the casket and portrait of Sheremet at the memorial service.
A mourner pays tribute near the casket and portrait of Sheremet at the memorial service.

Mourners included family, friends, colleagues, lawmakers, and government officials, among them President Petro Poroshenko. Members of Ukraine’s military and volunteer battalions set up to fight against Russia-backed separatists in the east also came out to bid him farewell.

Some carried carnations of yellow and blue -- Ukraine’s national colors. Others brought red and white roses. Mourners brought the flowers in even numbers, as is customary for grieving and funerals, and mounds of them spilled off a table.

Tears flowed as people approached Sheremet’s open casket. Many stopped momentarily to cross themselves and say a little prayer. Some laid a gentle hand atop the coffin. They choked up as they looked down at the body of the journalist, dressed in a dark suit and tie and resting atop a bed of red and white roses.

Before walking away, mourners embraced Sheremet’s longtime partner and colleague, Ukrayinska Pravda owner and founding editor Olena Prytula, and whispered their condolences in her ear. Prytula was accompanied by members of Sheremet’s family and close friends.

Nearby, a candle flickered beside a bunch of golden sunflowers and a black-and-white photograph of Sheremet smiling. A digital screen played a slideshow of scenes from his life: speaking at a protest in Minsk in the 1990s before a poster of a scowling President Alyaksandr Lukashenka; looking over the shoulder of a colleague typing away in one of the many newsrooms he worked in over the years; wearing a wide smile and curly wig at a costume party; strumming a guitar.

Addressing mourners, lawmaker and former journalist Mustafa Nayyem said that Sheremet’s legacy would live on despite his death.

“He will always be with us,” he said.

Ukrainian police examine the car in which Sheremet was traveling when he was killed.
Ukrainian police examine the car in which Sheremet was traveling when he was killed.

Anatoliy Hrytsenko, an independent member of parliament and former defense minister, recalled Sheremet as a “brave and honest man.” He said his killing was a “terrorist act” and the investigation into the crime would be a “test” for Ukrainian law enforcement and, in particular, Interior Ministry Arsen Avakov.

Because the car Sheremet was driving belonged to Prytula, law enforcement are investigating the possibility that she was the target of the attack, among other theories. She has been provided a security detail for protection.

But the ZN.ua and Ukrayinska Pravda news sites cited an unidentified law-enforcement source as saying, based on a preliminary examination of the evidence, that Sheremet appears to have been the intended target of the bombing.

The source told the news outlets that a surveillance camera near the home of Sheremet and Prytula recorded the moment an unidentified person placed an explosive device under Prytula’s car the night before the blast.

A blurry video posted on the Internet later on July 22 shows at least two figures, one possibly female, walking near parked cars with what looks like a suitcase. One figure appears to lean over a car.

Sheremet drove Prytula’s car to the Radio Vesti office at the same time each morning five days a week, a routine that was likely known to attackers, the ZN.ua and Ukrayinska Pravda reports cited the source as saying.

The source also said that an examination of the remains of the car, as well as an autopsy of Sheremet’s body, indicate that the bomb was intended solely to target the driver.

“If the blast of the explosion had gone downward, it would have been essentially extinguished in the ground, but it blew upward and to the left,” the source was quoted as saying. “This was an attack meant exclusively for the victim of the killing.”

An autopsy showed that Sheremet suffered injuries “incompatible with life,” the source said. He died because of a “rapid and critical” loss of blood in about one to two minutes.

Sheremet's body was to be repatriated to Belarus, where a funeral service will be held in the capital, Minsk, on July 23. Sheremet will be laid to rest beside his father.

The European Union has expressed "concern" over Turkey's jailing or firing of thousands of people suspected of involvement in a failed coup attempt and urged the country to respect human rights and the rule of law.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on July 21 declared a three-month emergency to strengthen state powers to arrest suspected coup participants while firing or suspending over 60,000 people he says were coup sympathizers in schools, universities, the police, military, and the judiciary.

"We are following the developments...very closely and with concern," said a joint statement by the bloc's foreign affair's chief, Federica Mogherini, and enlargement commissioner Johannes Hahn on July 22.

They called the targeting of teachers, judges, and journalists in particular "unacceptable" and said Turkey should respect "rule of law, human rights, and fundamental freedoms, including the right of all individuals concerned to a fair trial."

The EU call came as U.S. Vice President Joe Biden urged Turkey's Prime Minister Binali Yildirim in a phone call to conduct "investigations into the coup's perpetrators...in ways that reinforce public confidence in democratic institutions and the rule on law."

Based on reporting by Reuters and AFP

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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