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Russian basketball club owner's murder 'not linked to sport'

© RIA Novosti . Mikhail Fomichev / Go to the mediabankBusinessman Shabtai Kalmanovich killed in central Moscow
Businessman Shabtai Kalmanovich killed in central Moscow - Sputnik International
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The murder of Russian-Israeli businessman Shabtai Kalmanovich was not linked to his sport activity, the head of the Russian Basketball Federation said Wednesday.

VIDNOYE (Moscow Region), November 4 (RIA Novosti) - The murder of Russian-Israeli businessman Shabtai Kalmanovich was not linked to his sport activity, the head of the Russian Basketball Federation said Wednesday.

"In sport, people fight it out on the pitch. I am convinced this savagery has nothing to do with sport," Sergei Chernov said in the town of Vidnoye outside Moscow, where a ceremony to pay last respects to Kalmanovich took place.

Unidentified assailants armed with a 9mm automatic and a pump-action shotgun opened fire at Kalmanovich, 59, the owner of the Russian women's basketball club Spartak-Vidnoye, as he sat in his black Mercedes S500 on Moscow's Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment on Monday. He died instantly.

His driver, who initially tried to give chase, was forced to pull over outside the capital's 16th century Novodevichy Convent due to serious injuries.

Investigators have said the attack bears all the hallmarks of a contract killing. They have also not ruled out that the murder was linked to Kalmanovich's business activities.

Reports also suggested he was friends with the late notorious crime boss Vyacheslav Ivankov, nicknamed Yaponchik. Ivankov was gunned down in late July after leaving a restaurant in northern Moscow. He died of his injuries in early October.

Born in 1949 in Soviet Lithuania, Kalmanovich left the U.S.S.R. with his family for Israel in 1972, where he graduated from Jerusalem University. In 1988, he was sentenced to nine years in jail for spying for the Soviet Union, but released in 1993. He then left Israel and returned to Moscow, quickly finding his way in the chaotic dawn of post-Soviet capitalism.

 

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