On Sunday, the Austrian police carried out a large-scale operation in the village of Zistersdorf near the Slovak border, where they tried to catch a fifty-nine-year-old Slovak suspected of murdering a woman. She found the man, who hid in one of the wine cellars and, in addition to weapons, also explosives, dead after a few hours. Before that, the man apparently detonated one of the explosives, seriously injuring a member of the special forces.
According to the Austrian police, the man also had access to nuclear materials, and he was also investigated by the police in the Czech Republic, among others.
A 65-year-old woman was found dead in a local vineyard with stab wounds, police spokesman Johann Baumschlager said Saturday morning. The suspect in the murder is a 59-year-old Slovak citizen, Oleg M., who, according to local media, worked for the woman in the vineyard and apparently led to the fatal attack their dispute about his work ethic and the mess he had in the rented accommodation.
On the night of Saturday, the Austrian police evacuated ten houses in a town with approximately 300 inhabitants. The suspect was in one of the wine cellars attached to the houses. In addition to the special intervention unit Cobra and explosives experts, 120 police officers were deployed for the event. According to the police, the man was very dangerous and had access to weapons, explosives and “nuclear materials”, specifically “substances enriched with uranium“. He was known to the authorities of several countries, and was also investigated by the Czech police.
Police officers with megaphones tried to convince him to come out of hiding for several hours. The police did not receive a response, but they heard an explosion from the cellar. When they broke in, they found the man dead.
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