3 Bulgarians Arrested In UK Over Suspected Russian Espionage

No fewer than three citizens of Bulgaria living in the United Kingdom who were apprehended in February on suspicion of espionage offences on behalf of Russia have been charged with possessing false identity documents, police said.

London’s Metropolitan Police confirmed on Wednesday that Orlin Roussev, 45, Bizer Dzhambazov, 42, and Katrin Ivanova, 32, were taken into custody after they appeared late last month in the Central Criminal Court in London, according to news reports.

The trio is suspected of working for Russian security services, the BBC and other UK media have reported.

The charges allege the three had false documents among 34 pieces of identification in their possession.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that the documents, including passports and identity cards, were from the UK, Bulgaria, France, Italy, Spain, Croatia, Slovenia, Greece and the Czech Republic.

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According to the BBC, the three were detained by ‘counter-terrorism detectives from the Metropolitan Police, which has national policing responsibility for espionage, and are due to answer police bail in September’.

However, claims that the arrests were taken due to suspicions of connections to the Russian intelligence services were not immediately confirmed by police.

The other two detained—a 31-year-old man and a 29-year-old woman, both from London—were freed on bond and will appear in court the following month.

The three accused have not yet entered a plea. It is unknown when they will appear in court again.

The three, according to the BBC, have resided in the UK for many years.

The Metropolitan Police is the UK’s biggest police force and has national responsibility for matters involving espionage.

According to reports, one of the suspects had a history of business dealings with Russia and previously had a role as an adviser in Bulgaria’s energy ministry in 2008-09 when it was led by a pro-Kremlin Bulgarian minister.

‘Bulgaria’s energy ministry has long been seen as a lever of Russian influence,’ the news site reported, adding that Russian interference in Bulgarian political life ‘has long been a hot topic’.

More than 100 Russian diplomats have been expelled from Bulgaria in recent years over alleged espionage and a number of Bulgarians were arrested for collaboration, Balkan Insight added.

Africa Today News, New York

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