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MOSCOW, RUSSIA - OCTOBER 8, 2021: Novaya Gazeta newspaper editor-in-chief Dmitry Muratov talks to the media. .
MOSCOW, RUSSIA - OCTOBER 8, 2021: Novaya Gazeta newspaper editor-in-chief Dmitry Muratov talks to the media.Sergei Bobylev/TASS via Reuters
  • A person with a gold medal was attacked with paint on a train in Russia.

  • A US official told The Washington Post that the US concluded that Russian intelligence was behind the attack.

  • The editor of a Russian newspaper has been critical of Russia.

According to The Washington Post, the US government said that the attack on the Moscow critic was orchestrated by Russian intelligence.

The editor-in-chief of a Russian newspaper was attacked with red paint while on a train in Russia, burning his eyes.

They put oil paint in the compartment. My eyes were burning. The smell of oil was all over the car, according to a statement posted on Telegram. The departure was delayed by 30 minutes. I will try to wash it off.

The attacker shouted "Muratov, here's to you for our boys", referring to Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine.

—max seddon (@maxseddon) April 7, 2022

An unnamed US official told The Post that the government concluded that Russian intelligence was behind the attack.

The United States can confirm that Russian intelligence was behind the attack on the editor in chief of Novaya Gazeta.

Last year, Muratov was awarded the peace prize for his fight for freedom of expression in Russia and the Philippines. He was recognized for his work in Novaya Gazeta, which he founded in 1993 and championed free speech and democracy in the country.

Representatives from the White House, the Russian Embassy in the US, and Novaya Gazeta did not respond to Insider's request for comment.

In February, Novaya Gazeta published a three-word headline on their front page. There are bombs. There is a country called Ukraine.

—Mariya Petkova (@mkpetkova) February 25, 2022

After receiving a second warning from Russian communications regulators, the newspaper decided to stop operations until the end of the war.

The newspaper published an investigation into the incident on April 12 after the attack on Muratov. According to their investigation, the newspaper identified the suspected attacker as 41-year-old Russian nationalist Nikolai Trifonov, citing a photo taken by the man before he escaped the scene.

The man who filmed the attack was arrested on April 8.

A video of the attack on Muratov was posted on a pro-Russian military channel on Telegram with a caption that said "We will come for each of you."

The original article is on Business Insider.

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