两名失踪了三个月俄罗斯渔夫被怀疑和一起谋杀案有关,他们在失踪期间很有可能靠吃了另一个同伴维生。 今年8月,4个人在俄罗斯遥远东部的极度荒凉的郊区Yakutia区河钓时失踪, 搜救人员这个月终于在离Neryungri最近的小镇有250公里的Sutam河附近发现了其中两人,但另外两人下落不明。 获救的两人声称他们分开成两组,并说另两人很有可能还活着,因为他们很善于野外生存。 但是随着一些人类尸体碎片在Yakutsk附近被一组顶尖调查人员发现,谋杀案的调查随之展开。 获救的两人被送往医院医治严重的冻疮。 最初的判断是,两个人吃了一个同伴。目前还不清楚第四个人发生了什么事。 “我们发现被砍断的人类骨骼,头骨碎片和一块被血沾染的冰块。”一名调查人员说。 "Investigators carried out an examination of two areas. Fragments of a human corpse with signs of a violent death were discovered and removed," the Yakutia branch of Russia's Investigative Committee said in a statement. "A criminal case into suspected murder has been opened." According to a report on the lifenews.ru website, the men have fled the hospital where they were being treated for severe frostbite and were now on the run. Russia has no article in the criminal code for cannibalism but the state RIA Novosti news agency said that the initial theory was that the two men had eaten one companion. It was not clear what happened to the fourth man. "What we found were chopped human bones, fragments of a skull and a bloodstained chunk of ice," an investigator, who was not named, told the Komsomolskaya Pravda tabloid daily. "It's clear that this person did not die of his own accord," said the investigator. Meanwhile local news site Sakhapress.ru said that their expedition had been aimed at gold prospecting and not fishing as claimed. Two of the four are local inhabitants of the Russian Far East and the others are from the region of Saratov in central Russia who were visiting the area. The human remains have yet to be identified. The wife of one of the men who remains missing, named as Andrei Kurochkin from Saratov, said she had not yet given up hope for her husband. "The police said that they had found human remains. But I believe that Andrei is alive. I am hoping other hunters have found him and he is not alone," Olga Kurochkina told the newspaper. The rescued pair, reportedly aged 37 and 35, have denied any wrongdoing and said they had managed to survive as the winter set in a wooden hut by foraging for wild foods. http://www.news.com.au/world/can ... ir2ev-1226530900337 |