Makar assured the information was transferred to Ukraine, Russia and even the Belarusian Foreign Ministry back in 2012.
Former officer with the Belarusian spec-ops forces Igor Makar who has recently made public audio recordings alleging the involvement of the Belarusian top security leadership in the elimination of political dissidents, including the assassination in a car blast in Kyiv of journalist Pavel Sheremet, says the Ukrainian special services were warned about the preparation of the crime back in 2012.
In an interview with the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, he said he had sent the recordings of the conversation of April 11, 2012, as well as all the information with the names, to the U.S. diplomats. On the tapes, ex-KGB head in Belarus Vadim Zaitsev, together with the two officers with the Alpha anti-terrorist special squad, planned the murder of at least four Belarusian citizens who were abroad, including Pavel Sheremet.
During the interview, Makar said his friend, former head of the Minsk detention center Oleg Alkaev, whose murder had also been discussed on the tape, was called from the German criminal police and recommended not to leave the country, and was also offered security. The latter lived in Berlin. It means the information about the recording probably came to all countries where the "targets" of the Belarusian spec-ops forces lived.
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"In 2012, Pavel was just going to move to Ukraine. But I know the information was transferred to the Russian Federation, and to Ukraine, and even to the Belarusian Foreign Ministry. By the way, just then Vadim Zaitsev was removed from the post of the KGB head," Makar said.
According to him, Sheremet was in danger since he was actively investigating the explosion in the Minsk subway in 2011.