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DEATH OF “WHITE” GENERAL.

Fate Of Koutepoff. VICTIM OF KIDNAPPERS. United Press Association—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright PARIS, July 10. “Le Journal” quotes a Russian newspaper story that General Koutepoff died from an overdose of chloroform administered by the kidnappers, v/ho were junior officers of the Ogpu. It is stated that the kidnappers were shot when they returned for bungling the business, and failing to deliver General Koutepoff alive.

SOVIET REVENGE. .FEARS OF FRIENDS JUSTIFIED.. General Koutepoff, regarded as a leader of the colony of Russian emigres in Paris, disappeared on Sunday, January 26, and fears were entertained by his compatriots as to his fate. He was to have attended a memorial service at the Russian Church in the Rue Mademoiselle. The general left his house in the Rue Rousselet at halfpast 10. He was not seen again. For some years General Koutepoff had been head of the organisation of Russian ex-service men in Paris, the purposes of which were primarily benevolent, but also political. He enjoyed a degree of authority greater than any other Russian general among the military section of the Russian emigres. As head of that organisation he was particularly disliked by the Bolsheviks, who believed that the organisation maintained a certain amount of communication with Russia. In consequence of this he had been advised to refrain from going out unattended, and had followed the advice until a few months previously, when he protested that it was absurd.

The general’s career in Russia both before and after the war was distinguished. He was colonel of the Preobrajensky Guards, and after the war fought with Denikin and Wrangel. He was physically a strong man, and it was thought unlikely that he could have been attacked in the open street in broad daylight. The Press and public as a whole were convinced that the general had been kidnapped. The Paris police accepted the evidence of Chavreau, a policeman, who claimed to have seen a man resembling the general being carried off in a motor-car. In official quarters it was believed that he was still all ye, but that he might have been taken out of France.

An innkeeper of Chateau-Renard (Loiret), Roger Simon, stated that on Monday, January 27, the day after the general’s disappearance, a grey limousine drew up in front of his inn shortly before noon, and one of the four occupants got out and asked in a pronounced Russian or Polish accent for a glass of rum. He also asked to be directed tp Melleroy. The car was travel-stained as though it had come some distance, and Simon saw, as the supposed Russian stepped into the car, a large bag which could have contained the body of a man. Half an hour later a red taxi-cab, also much stained, went past in the same direction, travelling very fast. The significance of the last statement lay in the fact that other witnesses, in speaking of a grey limousine, also spoke of seeing a red taxi-cab accompanying it. Another story, a sensational one, was published in “La Liberte” (Paris). It stated that General Koutepoff was a prisoner in Moscow. The newspaper said that General Koutepoff was taken on board a Soviet vessel off the Normandy coast, close to the town of Houlgate. On his arrival in Moscow every means, including torture, was used to extract the, names of the White Russian spies in Moscow. These were then to be arrested and executed. The Soviet. would then announce a vast conspiracy against it, and allege the complicity of the French Government. The plan failed because the kidnapping was known to the whole world.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19300712.2.78

Bibliographic details

Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18617, 12 July 1930, Page 17

Word Count
602

DEATH OF “WHITE” GENERAL. Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18617, 12 July 1930, Page 17

DEATH OF “WHITE” GENERAL. Timaru Herald, Volume CXXV, Issue 18617, 12 July 1930, Page 17