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Bulgarian Journalist, Host of Anti-Corruption TV Show, Is Beaten and Killed

WARSAW, Poland — When the body of a 30-year-old woman, bruised, beaten and raped, was discovered Saturday in a park in the city of Ruse in northeastern Bulgaria, the grisly crime scene stunned a nation where corruption is endemic but murder is relatively rare.

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Marc Santora
, New York Times

WARSAW, Poland — When the body of a 30-year-old woman, bruised, beaten and raped, was discovered Saturday in a park in the city of Ruse in northeastern Bulgaria, the grisly crime scene stunned a nation where corruption is endemic but murder is relatively rare.

The victim was identified Sunday as Viktoria Marinova, a journalist who was the host of a new talk show called “Detector” that offered a venue for investigative reporters, and national shock over her brutal death quickly spread to international concern.

Although there was some disagreement about the extent of Marinova’s role in investigating corruption, the questions surrounding her death reflected the tense atmosphere for journalists in the region: Two reporters in the European Union — Jan Kuciak in Slovakia and Daphne Caruana Galizia in Malta — have been killed in the past year because of the work they were doing to expose graft at the highest levels of government.

Bulgarian officials condemned the attack on Marinova, but they were also insistent that there was nothing to suggest that she had been killed because of her work. They said there was no evidence that she had been threatened, and noted that her car keys, her cellphone and parts of her clothing were missing.

“It is about rape and murder,” Interior Minister Mladen Marinov said, a viewpoint that was shared by Prime Minister Boiko Borisov.

“The best criminologists were sent to Ruse, let’s not press them,” Borisov said. “A large amount of DNA has been obtained.”

Marinova was last seen alive Saturday morning, when she had coffee with friends and then went for a run along the Danube River.

The prosecutor general, Sotir Tsatsarov, told reporters in Ruse on Monday that nothing would be ruled out, but he also said that it was unlikely the killing was connected to her work.

“The hypothesis about linking the murder to her work and the topics she covered in her program is not a leading one,” he said, refusing to offer more details about the continuing investigation.

Still, some EU lawmakers and press freedom advocates were hesitant to accept the government’s suggestion that Marinova’s work was coincidental to her death.

“Those responsible must be held to account,” Harlem Desir, a representative for media freedom at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, wrote on Twitter, urging a full investigation.

The brutal crimes shook Ruse, where murders are rare. There were only five murders last year in the small city of about 150,000. Across Bulgaria, which has a population of a little more than 7 million, police reported 260 killings.

In 2016, there were 1.1 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in Bulgaria. In the United States, the murder rate in 2016 was 5.3 per 100,000.

Bulgaria has been ranked among the most corrupt nations in the European Union and among the worst in terms of press freedom. More than 10 years after joining the bloc, it has reported only limited progress in turning the tide against graft.

The Center for the Study of Democracy, based in the capital, Sofia, outlined in a report last year a portrait of a state so riddled with graft that 1 in 5 adults, or 1.3 million people, were thought to have taken part in a corrupt transaction, such as paying or receiving a bribe.

A 2016 report from the research organization RAND Europe estimated that every year, the country loses $7 billion to $12 billion because of corruption — a fifth of its gross domestic product.

At the same time, the number of independent media outlets reporting on corruption has fallen. The Union of Publishers in Bulgaria, in a report issued in May, found that “growing collusion between publishers, oligarchs and political parties during the past decade has resulted in a major decline in the press freedom.”

Teodor Zahov, the organization’s president, said in a statement that, “The pressure on independent media has been systematic for the past 10 years.”

“It is so sophisticated and lacking in transparency that some people don’t understand it and others don’t believe it,” he said.

In that dismal environment, international concern over Marinova’s killing — particularly in the European Union, which has prided itself on its support for press freedom — was swift to develop.

“We need to find out quickly whether the murder is connected with Marinova’s research into the misuse of EU funds,” said Sven Giegold, a German member of the European Parliament. “Freedom of the press is in acute danger in Europe if research into corruption ends in death.” The killings of Kuciak in Slovakia and Caruana Galizia in Malta caused alarm across the Continent, coming at a time when a new brand of professed populist leaders in the region have used increasingly caustic language to attack reporters, especially those probing corruption.

In February, 27-year-old Kuciak and his fiancée, Martina Kusnirova, also 27, were shot dead after he began digging into connections between top government officials and organized crime. Police have said the killings were connected to Kuciak’s work, and they recently arrested several people suspected of involvement, including one man authorities believe was a paid hit man. He was identified last week as Tomas Szabo, a former police officer who spent nine years on the force but who was reportedly having financial difficulties.

Prosecutors said Szabo and his accomplices were paid “at least 70,000 euros,” or about $80,000, for the killing of Kuciak. They believe his fiancée was not targeted but was “in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Authorities in Slovakia say they have narrowed the list of those suspected of ordering the killing but declined to offer any details while the investigation was in progress, noting that the plot may have also involved targeting a high-ranking prosecutor involved in prosecuting corruption.

Public anger over the death of Kuciak led to large protests and ultimately forced the prime minister, Robert Fico, to resign.

Kuciak’s murder came several months after one of Malta’s best-known investigative journalists, Caruana Galizia, 53, was killed when a bomb blew up her car. She was also looking into allegations of money laundering and fraud among the country’s business and political elite. Three men were arrested and accused of planting the bomb.

But that investigation appears to be stalled and there has been no public comment on who might have ordered the killing.

The first episode of Marinova’s program aired Sept. 30 and featured two investigative journalists — Dimitar Stoyanov from the Bivol.bg website and Attila Biro from the Romanian Rise Project — discussing their investigation into allegations of fraud involving EU funds linked to prominent businessmen and politicians in Bulgaria.

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