Ukrainian embassies receive 'bloody packages' containing animal eyes
A police officer points, outside the Ukrainian embassy in Madrid after a bloody package arrived at the embassy, in the wake of several letter bombs arriving at targets connected to Spanish support of Ukraine, amidst Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in Madrid, Spain December 2, 2022. REUTERS/Violeta Santos Moura
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Ukraine's embassy in
Madrid received a parcel containing animal eyes on Friday, the latest in a
series of similar "bloody packages" sent to its diplomatic missions
across Europe, Ukrainian and Spanish officials said.
Police cordoned off
the compound in the Spanish capital and started searching the area with sniffer
dogs.
The packages, soaked
in a liquid with a distinctive colour and smell, have been sent to embassies in
Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Croatia and Italy, to general consulates in
Naples and Krakow, and the consulate in Brno, Ukraine foreign ministry
spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said.
"We are
studying the meaning of this message," Nikolenko wrote in a statement on
Facebook, adding that Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba has ordered all the
embassies and consulates concerned to be placed under heightened security.
The bloody missives
follow the reception of six letter bombs sent in the past week to addresses
in Spain including Ukraine's embassy in Madrid, Prime Minister Pedro
Sanchez and the U.S. Embassy in Madrid, prompting Spain to step up security.
Nikolenko said the entrance to the flat of the ambassador to the Vatican had been vandalised. An embassy source in Rome said human faeces were left in front of the door.
Nikolenko also said that the embassy in Kazakhstan had received a bomb threat, which was subsequently not confirmed.
The embassy in the United States received a letter containing an article that was critical of Ukraine, he said. The letter, like most of the others, originated from one European country, he said, without giving details.
In Madrid, security personnel at the embassy spotted the package, which had a foreign stamp, at about 1300 GMT, Spain's interior ministry said.
A specialist unit sent to the scene confirmed it did not contain any explosive material, the ministry added.


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