{"id":85335,"date":"2023-09-11T14:52:51","date_gmt":"2023-09-11T14:52:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritytidings.com\/?p=85335"},"modified":"2023-09-11T14:52:51","modified_gmt":"2023-09-11T14:52:51","slug":"how-cold-war-spy-georgi-markov-was-murdered-with-an-umbrella","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritytidings.com\/world-news\/how-cold-war-spy-georgi-markov-was-murdered-with-an-umbrella\/","title":{"rendered":"How Cold War spy Georgi Markov was murdered with an UMBRELLA"},"content":{"rendered":"
It was a case that seemed more at home in one of Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels than reality.\u00a0<\/p>\n
On September 7, 1978, Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian dissident writer working for the BBC, felt a slight sharp pain while waiting for a bus on Waterloo Bridge in London.<\/p>\n
After looking behind him, he saw a man picking an umbrella up off the ground. Four days later – exactly 45 years ago today – Markov was dead.<\/p>\n
A post-mortem examination revealed he had been murdered with the poison ricin, which had been delivered into Markov’s leg via a tiny pellet fired from the end of the mysterious man’s umbrella.<\/p>\n
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It was a case that seemed more at home in one of Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels than reality. On September 7, 1978, Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian dissident writer working for the BBC, felt a slight sharp pain while waiting for a bus on Waterloo Bridge in London.\u00a0After looking behind him, he saw a man picking an umbrella up off the ground. Four days later – exactly 45 years ago today – Markov was dead<\/p>\n
Markov had defected to the UK – and opted to move to to Clapham, South London\u00a0–\u00a0after fleeing Bulgaria in 1969.<\/p>\n
The writer had continued to infuriate his home nation’s Communist regime with broadcasts on the BBC’s Bulgarian Service which mocked dictator Todor Zhivkov.<\/span><\/p>\n When he was attacked, Markov had been walking across Waterloo Bridge to get to his office at the BBC.<\/span><\/p>\n A man stepped out from a bus stop and jabbed him with an umbrella. After apologising in a foreign accent, he hailed a cab and left the scene.<\/span><\/p>\n Markov returned to his office but then quickly fell ill. He was taken to hospital that night with a high fever and died three days later.<\/span><\/p>\n The subsequent post-mortem examination found a pinhead-sized pellet in his leg that had been laced with ricin.<\/p>\n His wife,\u00a0Annabel Dilke, was left to raise their two-year-old daughter on her own.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n In 2013, the prime suspect in the case was tracked down to a small Austrian town, where he worked as an antiques dealer.<\/p>\n Francisco Gullino, who died in August 2021, had been named as the possible perpetrator of the crime in 2005.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n A post-mortem examination revealed he had been murdered with the poison ricin, a which had been delivered into Markov’s leg via a tiny pellet (above) fired from the end of the mysterious man’s umbrella<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The bus stop (right) Markov was walking past when he was pricked with the umbrella<\/p>\n He had once been known as ‘Agent Piccadilly’ by his Communist handlers.\u00a0<\/p>\n He was named in Bulgarian files as their only agent in London when the regime’s secret services \u2013 backed by the Russian KGB \u2013 had Markov ‘liquidated’.<\/p>\n Gullino left Britain the day after the attack and flew to Rome, where it is alleged he stood in a particular spot in St Peter’s Square in order to send a signal to his Bulgarian handler.<\/p>\n In an interview carried out by German filmmakers, Gullino admitted he was ‘probably’ in London at the time of Markov’s murder, but denied involvement in the plot.\u00a0<\/p>\n He also refused to confirm that he was a spy, despite the enormous evidence in Bulgarian security archives suggesting that he was.<\/p>\n Gullino had first been recruited by Bulgaria in 1970 after being caught smuggling drugs.<\/p>\n He made three trips to London in\u00a01977 and 1978, according to files from Durzhavna Sigurnost, the Bulgarian secret police.<\/span><\/p>\n After the attack on Markov, he returned via Rome to Denmark, where he lived in Copenhagen.\u00a0<\/p>\n <\/p>\n A replica of the umbrella used to murder Markov previously went on display in an exhibition at the Spy Museum in Washington D.C.<\/p>\n In 1993, after the fall of Communism in Bulgaria, he was interrogated for six hours by British and Danish detectives.<\/p>\n He admitted he had worked as a spy but protested his innocence over the Markov case, and was released after Bulgaria refused to provide information on the case.<\/p>\n Gullino finally emerged as the prime suspect in 2005 after a Bulgarian investigative journalist researched his country’s surviving intelligence archives.<\/p>\n By then the much-travelled antiques dealer was living in the Czech Republic, while keeping an address in Budapest.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Daily Mail’s initial coverage of Georgi Markov’s death. The news made the front page<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Mail’s coverage of what they called the ‘sinister micro-ball’ that was used to kill him<\/p>\n He later moved to Wels. Staff at the premises of Juergen Hesz, one of Europe’s most successful antique traders, said Gullino knows their boss and has been seen at the offices.<\/p>\n He was tracked down by director Klaus Dexel, while making the documentary Silenced: The Writer Georgi Markov and The Umbrella Murder.<\/p>\n Asked by filmmakers if he is still in contact with his Bulgarian contact from the 1970s, he declined to give a straight answer, replying with a smile: ‘This is an intimate question. Is it forbidden to talk to such people?<\/p>\n ‘Is it not good to work with foreign countries’ secret services?’<\/p>\n