Ganna Duritska, 23,
said she had given all the information she could to investigators but that they
were preventing her from leaving Russia "for her
security".
"For three
days they have escorted me in police cars to the Investigative Committee,"
Duritska told the Dozhd television channel, referring to the agency in charge
of the probe.
"They don't
explain when I will be let go or for what reason I am kept here."
Nemtsov, 55, was
gunned down close to midnight Friday in a heavily policed area on a bridge just
metres from the Kremlin, with the assailants still at large despite a citywide
manhunt.
Speaking via a
fuzzy Skype connection from a Moscow
apartment, Duritska said she did not see where the assassin came from as the
attack took place behind her.
But she said she
noticed a light-coloured car quickly drive off.
She said there had
been no earlier indication of any danger, or any sign of surveillance, adding
that the first police car arrived 10 minutes after she had called.
She said she was
immediately taken in for questioning which lasted through the night, with data
extracted from her phones by the investigators, adding that she is being
questioned as a witness.
"I've done
everything I could," she said, but investigators have told her that it would
be unsafe to leave Moscow .
"They say it's for my security."
"I don't
understand why I am still on Russian territory, because I want to go to my
mother who is ill and is in a difficult psychological state."
Ganna's mother Inna
Duritska, who lives in Kiev ,
told AFP that her daughter's virtual house arrest made her fear foul play on
the part of investigators.
"I am afraid
that she will be accused of this murder because they need the Ukrainian trace.
They can invent anything they want," she said.
"I'm afraid
that my daughter will become a second Nadezhda Savchenko," Inna Duritska
said, referring to the Ukrainian pilot who is on hunger strike in custody in Moscow , accused of involvement in the murder of Russian
citizens during the Ukraine
conflict.
"She is under
huge psychological pressure. They checked her telephone and are threatening to
take her to a polygraph in handcuffs," she added, saying her daughter
called her in tears.
"They have no
right to treat her that way!"
Ukrainian foreign
ministry spokesman Yevhen Perebyinis said the consul in Russia had been
to see Duritska several times and that she has written a formal letter
requesting her return home.
"The Ukrainian
embassy has issued a note asking to ensure the lawful return of Duritska to Ukraine ,"
he told AFP.
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