An informant who was plotting with Russian agents to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been arrested, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) said Monday.
The woman tried to gathered information for an airstrike during Zelenskyy’s visit to the southern Mykolaiv province in late July – including where he would be at specific times and the routes he would take – and was caught “red-handed’’ attempting to share it with Russian agents, the SBU said. The agency said it was aware of her plans and took extra safety measures to protect the president.
The informant also intended to find the location of Ukrainian “electronic warfare systems’’ and ammunition depots around the city of Ochakiv, site of a naval base, according to the SBU.
“The occupiers planned to use this information to prepare a new massive airstrike on the Mykolaiv region,’’ the SBU said in a statement posted on its Telegram channel.
The agency did not identify the suspect but said she’s an Ochakiv resident who used to work as a saleswoman at a military store and traveled around the area filming locations of strategic interest. She’s facing charges of unauthorized dissemination of military information and, if convicted, could be sentenced to up to 12 years in prison, the SBU said.
Developments:
◾ Russian science-fiction writer Dmitry Glukhovsky was sentenced to eight years in prison by a Moscow court that found him guilty Monday of spreading false information about the Russian military. Glukhovsky, who’s not in the country, had posted texts and videos on his social media channels accusing Russian servicemen of committing crimes in Ukraine.
◾ Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was placed in solitary confinement for two weeks Friday right after his conviction on extremism charges, which added 19 years to the nine-year prison term he was already serving, his spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh said Monday.
North Korea hacks into Russian missile developer, report says
A leading Russian missile developer was hacked for at least five months in 2022 by North Korean cyber-espionage teams, Reuters reported Monday.
The elite hackers, known to security experts as ScarCruft and Lazarus, are linked to the North Korean government, Reuters reported. Its story said they breached the systems at NPO Mashinostroyeniya, a rocket design bureau outside Moscow. It’s not clear what data the intruders viewed or took.
“Experts say the incident shows how the isolated country will even target its allies, such as Russia, in a bid to acquire critical technologies,” Reuters wrote.
Less than two weeks ago, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu visited the North Korean capital of Pyongyang as the country was marking the 70th anniversary of the Korean War.
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