Forensics expert claims Aliyev was murdered

13.12.2016
    A German expert says he believes that Rakhat Aliyev, a former son-in-law of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev who was found dead in an Austrian jail last year, was murdered.
    German physician Bernd Brinkmann, who studies deaths caused by asphyxiation, said on December 12 that he believes autopsies that concluded that Aliyev hanged himself were wrong.
    Speaking at a press conference with Brinkmann in Vienna, lawyers for Aliyev's widow said they are now seeking a renewed investigation.
    Aliyev was a former Kazakh ambassador to Austria and state security service deputy chief who became a vocal critic of Nazarbayev and was subsequently accused of murdering two Kazakh bankers in 2007.
    Aliyev denied the charge and said the case was politically motivated.
    Austria, which twice refused to extradite Aliyev to Kazakhstan because of the former Soviet republic's human rights record, opened its own investigation in 2011.
    Prosecutors charged him in December 2014.
    Brinkmann said that after analyzing autopsy results and photos of Aliyev's body, he concluded that Aliyev was killed in a style known as "burking" in which assailants asphyxiate a victim while leaving few traces of violence on the body.
    Aliyev remarried after his divorce from Nazarbayev's daughter Darigha, RFE/RL reports.