Woman detained over cafe bombing

Flowers are laid in memory to military blogger Maxim Fomin, who died in an attack on a St...
Flowers are laid in memory to military blogger Maxim Fomin, who died in an attack on a St Petersburg cafe at the weekend. Photo: supplied via ODT
Russia says it has arrested a woman suspected of blowing up a prominent war blogger in a St Petersburg cafe, as nationalist politicians and commentators accused Ukraine of the crime and called for retribution.


Maxim Fomin, a well-known Russian military blogger and cheerleader for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine who called himself Vladlen Tatarsky, was killed on Sunday in what appeared to be the second assassination on Russian soil of a figure closely associated with the conflict.

The woman arrested - Darya Trepova - was a Russian citizen who had previously been detained for protesting against the war in Ukraine, the state news agency TASS said.

Darya Trepova is suspected of bringing explosives to the cafe. Image: Russian Ministry of...
Darya Trepova is suspected of bringing explosives to the cafe. Image: Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs via Reuters
With over 500,000 followers on the Telegram messaging service that is popular in Russia, Tatarsky - who had himself fought in Ukraine in the past - mixed ultra-nationalist messaging with criticism of the way Russia is prosecuting what it calls its ‘‘special military operation’’ in Ukraine.

More than 30 people were injured in the blast which killed him. Some Russian commentators saw the bombing as the latest sign that violence related to the war in Ukraine was increasingly spilling on to Russian territory.
Russian investigators said they had arrested Trepova, a 26-year-old, who they said was suspected of bringing the explosives into the St Petersburg cafe.

Maxim Fomin, a well-known Russian military blogger and cheerleader for Russia’s invasion of...
Maxim Fomin, a well-known Russian military blogger and cheerleader for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, also called himself Vladlen Tatarsky. Photo: supplied via ODT
TASS suggested Trepova may have approached Tatarsky at yesterday’s cafe event and given him a statue as a gift which was packed with the explosives that killed him.

Unconfirmed Russian media reports said she had been discovered hiding in the St Petersburg apartment of a friend of her husband’s and had planned to flee to Uzbekistan.

Trepova had appeared on an interior ministry wanted list earlier yesterday. Court records cited by TASS showed she was detained on February 24 last year, the day Russia invaded Ukraine, for taking part in what the authorities deemed an illegal anti-war protest.

Russian politicians, without evidence, immediately pointed the finger of blame for Tatarsky’s killing at Ukraine’s intelligence services.

Ukraine did not claim responsibility for the killing -  a Ukrainian presidential adviser blamed ‘‘domestic terrorism’’ instead.

More than 30 people were injured in Sunday's attack.  Photo: supplied via ODT
More than 30 people were injured in Sunday's attack. Photo: supplied via ODT
Darya Dugina, the daughter of a prominent Russian nationalist ideologue, was killed in a car bomb attack outside Moscow last summer that Russia blamed on Kyiv. Ukraine denied involvement.

Russia’s FSB security service said last month that it had thwarted a Ukraine-backed car bomb attack on a prominent nationalist businessman who has been a cheerleader for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

State media outlet RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan welcomed Trepova’s arrest, and said her detention had avoided what she called ‘‘a national disgrace’’.

She made it clear on Telegram that she wanted Russia to hit back hard against whoever had killed Tatarsky.

‘‘Well well. Are we going to forget and forgive this?,’’ she asked sarcastically.