Spy claims by Kremlin against British diplomat and spouse of another in Moscow are 'baseless,' says No10

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Moscow from where two people ‘connected’ to the UK embassy are being expelled from Russia (PA Archive)

Moscow from where two people ‘connected’ to the UK embassy are being expelled from Russia (PA Archive)

Two people linked to Britain’s embassy in Moscow are being expelled from the country days after three Bulgarians were found guilty in a London court of being part of a Russian spy ring.

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said on Monday that two individuals connected to Britain’s embassy in Moscow had been ordered to leave the country for performing intelligence work, Russian state news agency TASS reported.

The two are understood to be one British diplomat and the spouse of another.

Downing Street said the spy claims against both individuals are “baseless”.

TASS cited the FSB as saying that both individuals had deliberately declared false information about themselves when entering Russia and that the FSB had uncovered what it called “signs of intelligence and sabotage work” by both which threatened Russia’s national security.

They had been given two weeks to leave Russia.

There was no immediate comment from Britain.

On Friday, three Bulgarians were found guilty in a London court of being part of a Russian spy unit run by Wirecard fugitive Jan Marsalek to carry out surveillance for the Kremlin in Britain and other European countries.

The timing raised suspicions that the explusions from Moscow ae a tit-for-tat response.

Court artist sketches of Bulgarian nationals (l to r) Katrin Ivanova, Vanya Gaberova, Orlin Roussev, Ivan Stoyanov and Bizer Dzhambazov (PA Archive)

Court artist sketches of Bulgarian nationals (l to r) Katrin Ivanova, Vanya Gaberova, Orlin Roussev, Ivan Stoyanov and Bizer Dzhambazov (PA Archive)

Marsalek tasked the sophisticated British-based Bulgarian team with spying on Ukrainian soldiers being trained at a US base in Germany, with a view to tracking their movements on the battlefield after Russia’s 2022 invasion, British prosecutors said.

Austrian national Marsalek is wanted by German authorities as the former chief operating officer of collapsed payments company Wirecard, accused of a major fraud.

Marsalek, whose current whereabouts are unknown but is believed to be in Russia, also discussed kidnapping journalists who were critical of the Kremlin and taking them back to Russia, prosecutors said.

“This was spying on an almost industrial scale on behalf of Russia, the Russian state and Russian intelligence services,” said Commander Dominic Murphy, the head of London police’s Counter Terrorism Command.

“We know that Marsalek was a go-between, between this group and Russian intelligence services.”

A selfie picture of Biser Dzhambazov and Vanya Gaberova (Metropolitan Police/PA) (PA Media)

A selfie picture of Biser Dzhambazov and Vanya Gaberova (Metropolitan Police/PA) (PA Media)

There was no immediate comment from the Russian embassy in London, although the Kremlin has always rejected such spying allegations.

The Bulgarian unit’s leader was Orlin Roussev, 47, who with his deputy Biser Dzhambazov, 43, and another man, Ivan Stoyanov, pleaded guilty to spying for Russia shortly before the trial, admitting charges of conspiring to collect information intended to be directly or indirectly useful to an enemy.

Roussev paid Dzhambazov more than 200,000 euros ($216,880), some of which he transferred on to the defendants, prosecutors said.

On Friday, a jury at London’s Old Bailey court found Katrin Ivanova, 43, Vanya Gaberova, 30, and Tihomir Ivanchev, 39, guilty of the same offence, while Ivanova was also convicted of possessing false identity documents.

The two women told the jury he had misled them and all three claimed they either had no idea what the activity they had been involved in was about, or that they thought they were working for Interpol.

Their conversations, which were at the centre of the prosecution’s case, contained half-baked plans and jokes about Russian operations on British soil, including the 2018 poisoning of Russian double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, England.

Police said the evidence showed the Bulgarians carried out six serious operations under the instruction of Marsalek from 2021 until their arrest in 2023.

One of these was a plan to use an IMSI catcher to intercept mobile phone signals at the Patch barracks, a US base near Stuttgart where Ukrainian troops were believed to be training to use surface-to-air Patriot missiles.

The pair later discussed plans to deploy the IMSI catcher in Britain in February 2023, shortly before five of the spy ring were arrested.

Another operation involved spying on Christo Grozev, a Bulgarian who worked for investigative website Bellingcat.

Grozev was the lead investigator on Bellingcat’s reports about Skripal’s poisoning. Marsalek and Roussev discussed stealing Grozev’s computer and possibly kidnapping him and taking him to Russia or even killing him, said prosecutor Alison Morgan.

The group also targeted British-based Russian Roman Dobrokhotov, editor in chief of The Insider, Bergey Ryskaliyev, a former Kazakh politician granted asylum in Britain, and Russian dissident Kiril Kachur.

The sixth operation involved staging a fake protest outside the Kazakh embassy in London, with a view to enabling Russia to pass information to Kazakh intelligence and gain favour with Kazakhstan, Morgan said.

Ivanova was convicted of possessing false identity documents after several documents – including fake Belgian, Bulgarian and French passports bearing Marsalek’s photo – were found at her and Dzhambazov’s home in north London.

Police also recovered 75 different passports and ID documents in 55 different names.

The trial heard Roussev and Dzhambazov referred to the other Bulgarians as “the minions”, an apparent reference to the small, yellow characters in the Despicable Me animated film series. A plush toy with a spy camera was also found by police.

The group will be sentenced in May but the judge Nicholas Hilliard warned them that they faced jail terms.

In February the Foreign Office stripped a Russian diplomat of their accreditation, with Foreign Secretary David Lammy saying the the UK will be “unapologetic” in standing up to Mr Putin.

That move was in response to what the Foreign Office said was a “baseless” decision to expel a British diplomat from Russia on suspicion of spying in November last year.



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Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

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