Police in ‘Good Friday’ hunt for Cyprus serial murder victims

Firefighters and investigators search a man-made lake near the village of Mitsero in proximity to the Cypriot capital of Nicosia. (AP Photo)
Updated 26 April 2019
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Police in ‘Good Friday’ hunt for Cyprus serial murder victims

  • The search focused on two lakes southwest of Nicosia where the suspect, Nicos Metaxas, a 35-year-old Greek Cypriot army officer, allegedly confessed to having dumped the bodies
  • The suspect has admitted to killing seven foreign women and underage girls in total, according to police sources, and police have already recovered three bodies, all Filipino housemaids

XYLIANTOS, Cyprus: Cypriot authorities were combing lakes for the remains of three women and a girl dumped by a suspected serial killer, in a “Good Friday” hunt for bodies that has shocked the island.
The search focused on two lakes southwest of Nicosia where the suspect, named in local media as Nicos Metaxas, a 35-year-old Greek Cypriot army officer, allegedly confessed to having dumped the bodies.
The suspect has admitted to killing seven foreign women and underage girls in total, according to police sources, and police have already recovered three bodies, all Filipino housemaids.
The stepped-up search at the lakes, normally used as picnic sites in the foothills of the Troodos mountains, coincided with the day that Greek Cypriots mark the Orthodox Good Friday.
Cyprus fire chief Marcos Trangolas was at the roped-off crime scene at Memi Lake in Xyliantos to follow up on the search along with several high-level police and intelligence officials.
“Today we are planning to send in divers in order to search step by step the lake according to information we received from the police,” his spokesman Andreas Kettia told AFP.
He said the suspect was on site with the rescue teams and that they were working in tandem with a specialized diving company to locate and recover the bodies.
At the other crime site at Red Lake in Mitsero, a 10-minute drive away, Kettia said robotic equipment would be sent in to search its acidic, copper-colluded waters.
“Many times we’ve dealt with rescuing people or animals from dams... but never something at this grade,” the spokesman said.
Police sources have said authorities are also looking into cases involving an Asian woman as well as that of a Romanian mother and her young daughter reported missing in 2016.
The suspect on Thursday showed investigators the spot where he had dumped a body in a well at an army firing range outside the capital.
Local media have dubbed the case the island’s “first serial killings” after two bodies, both believed to be Filipinos, were recovered from an abandoned mineshaft since April 14.
Cypriot police are also searching for the body of a missing six-year-old Filipino girl, daughter of one of the murdered women, in a case which has shocked many living on the holiday island that is relatively free of serious crimes.
President Nicos Anastasiades, in a statement issued by the palace on Friday, condemned “these hideous crimes” against foreign women.
“Shocked by the revelation of so many shameful murders against innocent foreign women and young children,” the president expressed “deepest sorrow and strong concern.”
“He also acknowledges the indignation of Cypriot society over murders that seem to have selectively targeted foreign women in our country to work, as this is contrary to the tradition and values of our culture,” his office said.
The news website Kathimerini Cyprus wrote a “letter of apology” to the victims’ families.
“The tragedy surrounding the serial killer murders is not only a crime against the victims and their families. It is also a crime against the country, carried out by an assassin... but also perpetrated by a state and a society that is constantly developing xenophobic tendencies and racist behaviors,” it said.
“And this problem gets magnified by provocatively ineffective state machinery that serves two groups separately: ‘Cypriots’ and ‘foreigners’,” it said, referring to reports that authorities failed to take action after the foreign women were initially reported missing.


UK defense minister suggests Putin’s ‘hidden hand’ behind Iran tactics

Updated 51 min 24 sec ago
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UK defense minister suggests Putin’s ‘hidden hand’ behind Iran tactics

LONDON: UK Defense Minister John Healey suggested on Thursday that Russia was influencing Iran’s use of drone attacks in its war with the United States and Israel.
Healey said Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “hidden hand” may be behind some of the tactics deployed by Tehran in the Middle East conflict, which started when the United States and Israel struck Iran on February 28.
He told reporters that officials were analyzing an Iranian-made drone that hit the UK’s Akrotiri air force base in Cyprus on March 1 “for any evidence of Russian or any other foreign components and parts.”
“We will update you and appropriately publish any findings from that when we’ve got them,” he said during a visit to Britain’s military headquarters in Northwood, near London.
“But I think no one will be surprised to believe that Putin’s hidden hand is behind some of the Iranian tactics, potentially some of their capabilities as well, not least because one world leader that is benefiting from the sky high oil prices at the moment is Putin,” he added.
Russia is a close ally of Iran, with the two agreeing last year to help each other counter “common threats.”
US President Donald Trump said Saturday he had no indication Russia was supporting Iran in the war, but that if they were, it was not “helping much.”
Nick Perry, the British military’s chief of joint operations, told Healey there were “definitively” signs of a link between Russia and Iran, including Iran’s use of drones “as learned from the Russians.”
No one was injured when the drone hit a hangar at Akrotiri. British warplanes shot down a further two drones heading for the base the same day.
Guy Foden, a brigadier in the British army, briefed Healey that UK troops based at a military base housing international coalition troops in Irbil, Iraq, had helped shoot down two Iranian drones on Wednesday.