"Fedotov entered the territory of Bulgaria three times, on February 5, 2015 and flew on February 22 from the Sofia Airport, the second time he flew to the city of Burgas on April 24, 2015 and again by plane left Bulgaria on April 28, 2015, the third time he flew to Sofia on May 23, 2015 and left the country in a passenger car on May 29, along with another unidentified person," Tsatsarov said at a meeting with Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, as quoted by the BGNES news agency.
The meeting was also attended by Bulgarian Interior Minister Mladen Marinov and UK Ambassador to the country Emma Hopkins, according to the agency.
Later, the Bellingcat blogger group alleged that Fedotov is linked to the presumed poisoning of Gebrev.
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Gebrev was hospitalized on April 28, 2015 after collapsing at an event in Sofia with symptoms of severe poisoning. His condition later improved and he was released. The businessman then sought assistance from two laboratories specializing in chemical weapons, The Finnish Verifin lab identified one organophosphate in Gebrev’s urine as a strong pesticide, while the other proved unidentifiable with the standard testing tools for chemical weapons, the prosecutor general said.
The investigation into the incident failed to find perpetrators, however, in 2018, Gebrev sent a letter to Tsatsarov claiming that poison in his case was from the Novichok family, allegedly used in the poisoning of Skripal. The probe was reopened last October, the chief prosecutor stressed.
Gebrev claims that poisoning attack might be linked to his defence industry business, particularly his deliveries of defence equipment to Ukraine or possible interest of Russia in an arms plant that he owns, the Bellingcat reported.
Russian Foreign Ministry has dismissed reports about a third suspect in the Skripal case as disinformation. Kremlin said it was unaware whether Bellingcat's reports on links between the Skripal case and the 2015 poisoning in Bulgaria were well-grounded.