Viktoria Marinova: Man quizzed over Bulgaria presenter murder Published duration 9 October 2018

image copyright AFP image caption Vigils for the dead journalist have been held around the country

A man has been questioned over the killing of Bulgarian journalist Viktoria Marinova, police say.

They said he would be freed without charge and they had nothing further to announce. He is described as a Romanian citizen of Ukrainian descent.

Ms Marinova's body was found in a park in the northern city of Ruse, near the River Danube, on Saturday. She had also been raped.

On Monday hundreds of mourners held vigils around the country.

It is not known if the killing is linked to Ms Marinova's work at a local TV station, but Bulgaria is said to be the worst country in the European Union for press freedom.

Ruse police chief Teodor Atanasov said the man's alibi was checked and that he was not a suspect. He would be released "very shortly", he added.

On Monday the town's regional prosecutor, Georgy Georgiev, said Ms Marinova had suffered blows to the head and was suffocated in the fatal attack, adding that her "mobile phone, car keys, glasses and part of her clothes were missing".

image copyright AFP/TVN TELEVISION image caption Ms Marinova is the third high-profile journalist to be killed in the EU this year

The 30 year old worked as a presenter on a current affairs talk programme called Detector.

Its first episode featured an interview with two Bulgarian investigative journalists exploring alleged fraud involving EU funds linked to businessmen and politicians. The pair, Attila Biro and Dimitar Stoyanov, were arrested in September while looking into the case.

AP news agency quoted prosecutors as saying on Monday that they had opened an investigation into the alleged fraud.

Marinova is the third high-profile journalist to be murdered in the EU in the past year, and the fourth since the start of 2017.

Swedish reporter Kim Wall was killed by Danish inventor Peter Madsen after boarding his homemade submarine to do an interview in Copenhagen in August 2017.

Both Caruana Galizia and Kuciak were known for their work exposing corruption.

Bulgaria is considered the worst country in the EU when it comes to press freedom, according to Reporters Without Borders.

The organisation says investigative journalists in the country are often subjected to pressure , "from mere warnings to intimidation and physical assaults on themselves or their property".

The European Commission has called for a "swift and thorough investigation" into Ms Marinova's killing.