Berlin police looking into device disabled at residence housing Russian
media
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[May 07, 2022] FRANKFURT
(Reuters) -Berlin criminal investigators and prosecutors were on
Saturday studying a device found and destroyed at a residential building
housing Russian news agency staff in the city's Steglitz district,
police said.
The device was found on Friday and investigators are looking into how
dangerous it had been and who it was aimed at, a Berlin police spokesman
said in response to an enquiry. He added that there would be further
updates later on Saturday.
Russia's embassy in Berlin said a bottle had been thrown through a
window of the apartment block on Friday evening, and that an improvised
bomb had been found in the subsequent search, which it said German
sappers had identified and deactivated.
The Russian state-run RIA news agency said it had journalists living in
the block.
Russia's foreign ministry demanded on Saturday that authorities in
Germany and other European Union and NATO states take steps to protect
Russian journalists and their families abroad.
"We see this as a direct consequence of the harassment of Russia media
and their employees unleashed in the West," its statement said. "The
politicised decision to disconnect Russian media from the airwaves in
the European Union was the precursor to their physical intimidation,
right up to their elimination."
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Video footage broadcast by RIA on Friday evening showed a
cordoned-off street and a person in a protective suit, which the
agency said was one of the sappers working to defuse the bomb.
Various Russian broadcasters have been banned in Western countries
after being accused of spreading propaganda in connection with
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a "special
operation" to disarm the country and protect it from fascists.
Ukraine and the West say the fascist allegation is baseless and that
the war is an unprovoked act of aggression.
State-controlled Russian outlets RT and Sputnik were banned
throughout the European Union on March 2.
"Systematic information manipulation and disinformation by the
Kremlin is applied as an operational tool in its assault on
Ukraine," EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said at the time.
(Reporting by Vera Eckert and Reuters bureaux; editing by Kirsten
Donovan and Clelia Oziel)
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