GRAMSH, Albania — The three espionage
suspects — two Russians and one Ukrainian — were hardly discreet.
اضافة اعلان
They arrived at the derelict Albanian weapons
factory in a bright orange Chevrolet Camaro in broad daylight. After they
clambered over a back wall in full view of nearby houses, one of them was
spotted by military guards and asked what he was doing.
The man — a 24-year-old Russian, Mikhail
Zorin, who had arrived in Albania by bicycle two weeks earlier, purportedly to
take artsy photographs of abandoned buildings — pulled out a canister of
self-defense spray and squirted two guards.
Captured nonetheless, he was taken to a police
station for questioning and declared himself a Russian agent, either out of
honesty or a dishonest urge to tell interrogators what he thought they wanted
to hear.
“If he is a spy, he is a very stupid one,”
Zorin’s lawyer, Isuf Shehu, said in an interview in Tirana, the Albanian
capital, scoffing at an espionage investigation into the trio as a “theater of
the absurd, like Kafka’s ‘The Trial’”.
A soldier at the
military base in Gramsh, Albania, on January 29, 2023, where three interlopers
were arrested in August.
Albania’s prime minister, Edi Rama, in an
interview, said he was baffled that Zorin and his two companions would want to
spy on a crumbling, long-defunct factory with no secrets to steal. But, he
added, “this is not about phobias but about all the real stuff happening”,
since Russia invaded Ukraine. (He used an earthier term for “stuff.”)
Boris
and Natasha everywhereAlbania, a member of NATO, and other countries
in the alliance, he said, had no choice but to take any hint of Russian
skulduggery seriously. “This is the situation imposed by Russia,” he added.
Albania, a member of NATO, and other countries in the alliance, he said, had no choice but to take any hint of Russian skulduggery seriously. “This is the situation imposed by Russia,” he added.
An abiding distrust of Russia and its people
in Poland, the Baltic States and other nations in Eastern Europe with painful,
direct experience of Moscow’s methods used to be viewed as paranoia by
countries distant from Russia’s border. But after the invasion of Ukraine a
year ago, it has now become the norm across much of Europe.
“Every Russian is now a Boris and Natasha from
‘Rocky and Bullwinkle,’” lamented Nina Khrushcheva, a Russian-born American
scholar at the New School in New York, referring to the two Russian villains in
the American cartoon show.
Khrushcheva, the great-granddaughter of the
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, described how she had recently been pulled
aside for questioning four times at an airport in Portugal after showing her US
passport, which identifies her place of birth as Moscow.
When she asked, “Do I really look that
suspicious?” a woman checking her replied: “Yes, you are Russian.”
As well as inflicting a “horrible war” on
Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Khrushcheva said, has “fed his own
nationals as cannon fodder into a war of attitudes and perceptions that Russia
has already lost for years to come no matter how the real war ends”.
Urban
explorers?Whether the espionage investigation set off by
the three visitors to an idle arms factory in the remote Albanian town of
Gramsh is a product of paranoia or a counterespionage coup against devious
Moscow agents depends on whom you ask.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Khrushcheva said, has “fed his own nationals as cannon fodder into a war of attitudes and perceptions that Russia has already lost for years to come no matter how the real war ends”.
None of the three have been charged, but all
have been held in jail since August, when they were grabbed for sneaking into
the long-shuttered weapons factory, part of a network of once secret but now
mostly abandoned military sites in the central Albanian mountains dating back
to the communist era of Enver Hoxha, the country’s despotic and deeply paranoid
leader until his death in 1985.
A court in the Albanian city of Elbasan on
Friday extended their pretrial detention for a further three months.
All three have an online presence as fans of
urban exploration, or “urbex”, a pastime that revolves around visiting and
taking pictures of defunct factories, former military bases, Cold War missile
silos, decommissioned nuclear plants, and other mostly creepy places.
Spiro Lasi, a construction worker whose house
looks out over the Gramsh factory, said he was stunned that the trespassers
were being held on suspicion of spying. “It makes no sense to me at all,” he
said, noting that the factory had stopped work decades ago and, though still
guarded by the Albanian military, holds nothing but ruins.
Connecting
the dotsAldi Kozaria, an Albanian journalist who broke
the story of the arrests, said that he was initially skeptical, too, but that
he now thinks the three were definitely up to no good. “In the beginning I
thought it was all a joke, but if you connect dots, the case starts to makes
sense,” he said.
One important dot, he says, is the fact that
shortly after the arrests, Moscow sent an urgent request to Albania for the
extradition of one of the two detained Russians, Svetlana Timofeyeva, 33, a
prominent urbex photographer with more than 250,000 followers on Instagram,
where she uses the name Lana Sator.
The extradition request claimed that
Timofeyeva was wanted in Russia in connection with a 2018 criminal case
involving illegal entry into an underground military site in Chekhov, a town
south of Moscow that housed a Cold War nuclear command center.
The Albanian prosecutor leading the
investigation, Kreshnik Ajazi, says he thinks it fishy that Moscow moved so
quickly to dust off an old case to justify a demand that Timofeyeva be sent
back to Russia. Extradition, he said, “is one of the ways they rescue people”.
Social
media footprintsBut Timofeyeva, according to her lawyer,
Fatmir Lushi, has no desire to go back to Russia and is fighting extradition
because she “left a clear record on social media against Putin and the war in
Ukraine”. Lushi discounted the possibility that Russia’s request was a ruse to
save an agent. On the contrary, he said, Timofeyeva faced punishment if sent to
Russia and would be treated “very inhumanely”.
Maria Passer, a longtime member of Russia’s
tight-knit urbex community, said that she had known Timofeyeva for nine years,
traveled with her extensively, including to Albania, on trips to photograph
derelict buildings, and had “never seen anything that seemed suspicious”.
“They acted like normal visitors but they were not going to normal places. Tourists in Albania go to the beach, not to a military base.”
Timofeyeva’s fellow Russian on the ill-fated
visit to Gramsh, Zorin, is less well known in the urbex world but he also has
an Instagram account, on which, before his arrest, he posted photographs of
decrepit factories — and cats. After Russia invaded Ukraine last February, he
posted a Ukrainian flag.
A chemistry student in the Czech Republic,
Zorin made no effort to keep his trip to Albania secret, reporting about his
journey there by bicycle from neighboring Montenegro on Telegram.
He was joined in Albania by Timofeyeva and a
third urbex enthusiast, Fedir Alpatov of Ukraine, the owner of the orange
sports car used to drive to Gramsh.
The
evidenceRama, the prime minister, described the affair
as a “mystery”. The Gramsh site, ringed by rusty barbed wire, clogged with
weeds, and dotted with concrete bunkers built under Hoxha, has not, according
to the prime minister, produced weapons for many years. “I don’t think there is
anything to spy on there,” he said.
When it was still working decades ago, the
factory produced an Albanian version of Soviet-designed Kalashnikov rifles, not
a weapon whose technology Moscow would need to snoop on.
The prosecutor, Ajazi, still thinks he has a
case, though a final decision on whether to file formal charges of espionage
will, he said, depend on forensic analysis of the contents of two drones,
cellphones, video recorders, a laptop, and USB devices seized from the
suspects.
Svetlana Timofeyeva, one of the three
suspects, at a courtroom in Elbasan, Albania, on Thursday February 2, 2023.
So far, only one drone has been fully
analyzed. It was found to contain images of Albanian security facilities,
hydroelectric dams, and other places that, according to the prosecutor, “are
not things that ordinary bloggers would film.” Shehu, the lawyer, described the
images as typical urbex pictures.
Also disputed is the nature of spray that
Zorin used against the guards. The prosecutor identified it as a “nerve agent”,
but the lawyer said that it was an off-the-shelf product of the kind often
carried by travelers in unfamiliar, remote places.
The biggest mystery is why, according to his
lawyer, Zorin told police officers on the day of his arrest that he was working
for Russian intelligence. The transcript of his questioning is secret and the
prosecutor declined to comment on whether Zorin really had made an apparent
confession, saying only that “if this were true, it would be strong evidence”.
Publicly released evidence of espionage,
however, is mostly circumstantial. “They acted like normal visitors but they
were not going to normal places. Tourists in Albania go to the beach, not to a
military base,” the prosecutor said.
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