Mystery Surrounds NATO Auditor General's Suspicious Death
26
December, 2016
Police
in Belgium are probing the suspicious circumstances surrounding the
death of a high ranking NATO official - the auditor general, whose
responsibilities included probing terror financing - after his body
was discovered in his car with a gunshot wound to the head.
As SudInfo reports, troubling elements accumulate around the death of
Yves Chandelon, a senior official of the NATO based in Luxembourg,
who lived in Lens, near Tournai.
The
man was found dead on Friday in Andenne, with a bullet in his head.
An autopsy was performed on Tuesday. The family does not believe it
was suicide as many have reported.
Did
Yves Chandelon have any enemies? Was he threatened in the course of
his work in NATO? Was it an odious crime made to look like suicide,
or did the man go through a troubled period? For his relatives, the
incomprehension is total.
The
62-year-old auditor general of NATO was found in the Belgian town of
Andenne, 62 miles away from his home and office in Lens on December
16. As The Express reports,
As
Auditor General, Mr Chandelon was responsible for internal accounting
at NSPA as well as external investigations into money laundering
activities and terrorist financing - and more bizarrely it has been
reported locally that the gun which killed him was found in the
glovebox of the vehicle.
According
to local newspaper reports Mr Chandelon was the registered keeper of
three weapons however the gun found at the scene did not belong to
him, it has been claimed.
Police
are currently probing whether he had received any threats that could
be related to his work and highlighted that the gun used was not
registered in his name.
According
to Flemish newspaper 'The Morning', Mr Chandelon's relatives said he
attended his office Christmas party the night before he died.
Reporting
gets even more confusing as LaMeuse carried two reports with
additional facts about Chandelon’s death. The first stated that a
“farewell letter” was found in Chandelon’s car. The second
stated that the gun used in the apparent suicide was found in his
right hand, despite the fact that Chandelon was left-handed.
It
has been reported that the former director of The Institute of
Internal Auditors (IIA) Luxembourg had complained of getting strange
telephone calls before he died and "felt threatened".
We
are sure the facts will all come out and this 'strange' episode will
be brushed under the carpet - like the mysterious deaths of various
senior European bankers over the past few years.
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