June 17, 20227:31 AM GMT+7
A general view shows the headquarters of the Main
Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation,
formerly known as the Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU), in Moscow, Russia
October 4, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
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Summary
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Russian agent accused of posing as intern to infiltrate court
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ICC is investigating allegations of war crimes in Ukraine
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False Brazilian ID included tastes for trance music, bean stew
AMSTERDAM, June 16 (Reuters) - The Dutch
intelligence service said on Thursday it had uncovered a Russian military agent
attempting to use a false identity to infiltrate the International Criminal
Court (ICC) which is investigating accusations of war crimes in Ukraine.
Sergey Vladimirovich Cherkasov created an
elaborate cover story dating back years to try and enter the Netherlands as a
Brazilian national for an internship at the Hague-based ICC in April, the
agency's head told Reuters.
"This was a long-term, multi-year GRU
operation that cost a lot of time, energy and money," said Dutch
intelligence agency chief Erik Akerboom, using the acronym for Russia's
military intelligence service.
No GRU representative could be immediately
reached for comment, though President Vladimir Putin's government has in the
past frequently denied spying accusations as a Western smear campaign against
Moscow.
The Dutch General Intelligence and Security
Service (AIVD) said in a statement that the man, who went by the alias Viktor
Muller Ferreira, was picked up at a Dutch airport. He was declared an undesirable
alien and put on the next flight back to Brazil, it added.
Brazil's federal police said Cherkasov was
taken into custody and is being prosecuted for the use of false documents.
"It clearly shows us what the Russians
are up to - trying to gain illegal access to information within the ICC. We
classify this as a high-level threat," Akerboom added, saying the ICC had
accepted him for an internship.
There was no immediate comment on the case
from the Russian government, or the ICC.
'WELL-CONSTRUCTED COVER'
The Dutch agency said it had taken the
unusual step of releasing detailed information on the case to expose the
workings of Russian intelligence and threat to other international
institutions.
It distributed a four-page document outlining
what it said was Cherkasov's invented cover story. That included a supposed
troubled family history and details from a club where he liked to listen to
electronic trance music and his favourite restaurant in Brasilia where he would
eat cheap brown bean stew.
"Cherkasov used a well-constructed cover
identity by which he concealed all his ties with Russia in general, and the GRU
in particular," the statement said.
Brazilian police said Cherkasov entered
Brazil in 2010 and assumed the false identity of a Brazilian whose parents had
died. Passing for a Brazilian, he lived in Ireland and the United States for
several years, the police statement said, and had returned to Brazil to prepare
his move to the Netherlands.
The ICC, a permanent global war crimes
tribunal with 123 member states, opened an investigation in Ukraine just days
after Putin sent his troops in on Feb. 24. It is examining allegations of war
crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.
The Dutch have expelled more than 20 Russians
accused of spying in recent years.
They include four people accused in 2018 of
hacking the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), two
accused of spying in the corporate, high-tech sector in 2020, and 17 suspected
operatives accredited as diplomats who were thrown out after this year's
invasion of Ukraine.
Russia has denied all the charges and
responded to the latest expulsions by also kicking out 15 Dutch embassy and
consulate staff from Moscow and St. Petersburg.
Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Additional reporting by Anthony
Boadles in Brasilia; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Michael Perry
Netherlands agency says it foiled Russian spy attempt to
infiltrate ICC
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-61831961
Netherlands says Russian
spy caught seeking war crimes court internship
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