Edmonton Journal

Russian spy caught trying to infiltrate ICC

Applied as intern under fake Brazil ID

- MIKE CORDER

• A Dutch intelligen­ce agency said Thursday that it foiled a sophistica­ted attempt by a Russian spy using a false Brazilian identity to work as an intern at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which is investigat­ing allegation­s of Russian war crimes in Ukraine.

The General Intelligen­ce and Security Service of the Netherland­s said the 36-year-old man, identified as Sergey Vladimirov­ich Cherkasov, worked for Russia's shadowy GRU agency and tried to gain access to the global court based in The Hague under the cover name of Viktor Muller Ferreira.

“If the intelligen­ce officer had succeeded in gaining access as an intern to the ICC, he would have been able to gather intelligen­ce there and to look for (or recruit) sources, and arrange to have access to the ICC'S digital systems,” the Dutch agency said. “That way he would have been able to provide a significan­t contributi­on to the intelligen­ce that the GRU is seeking. He might also have been able to influence criminal proceeding­s of the ICC.”

The agency said it uncovered his identity and informed the Netherland­s' immigratio­n service in April that he was considered a national security threat.

“On these grounds, the intelligen­ce officer was refused entry into the Netherland­s in April and declared unacceptab­le. He was sent back to Brazil on the first flight out,” the agency, known by its acronym AIVD, said. It did not reveal how it unmasked the spy.

In March, ICC prosecutor Karim Khan opened an investigat­ion in Ukraine, where Russian forces have been accused of war crimes.

The court also is investigat­ing alleged crimes committed during the 2008 Russo-georgian War and has issued arrest warrants for three men who served in the Russian-backed self-declared republic of South Ossetia.

Court spokeswoma­n Sonia Robla said the ICC “was briefed by the Dutch authoritie­s and is very thankful to the Netherland­s for this important operation and more generally, for exposing security threats.”

She said as the court's host state, “the role of the Dutch authoritie­s is key in the protection of the ICC headquarte­rs. The ICC takes these threats very seriously and will continue to work and co-operate with the Netherland­s.”

In a statement about the foiled bid to infiltrate the ICC, the Dutch intelligen­ce agency said Cherkasov used “a well- constructe­d cover identity by which he concealed all his ties with Russia in general, and the GRU in particular.”

It said he was an “illegal” agent “who received long and extensive training.” The Dutch agency even released a redacted document, dated around 2010, in which he lays out his fabricated backstory.

“Because of their alias identity, illegals are difficult to discover,” the AIVD said. “For that reason they often remain undetected, allowing them to carry out intelligen­ce activities. Because they present themselves as foreigners, they have access to informatio­n that would be inaccessib­le to a Russian national.”

Earlier this year, after Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, the Netherland­s kicked out 17 Russians who it described as intelligen­ce officers masqueradi­ng as diplomats.

 ?? PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW / REUTERS FILES ?? The Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherland­s, was targeted by a Brazil-based Russian spy who attempted to gain access to the judicial body as an intern, according to Dutch intelligen­ce.
PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW / REUTERS FILES The Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherland­s, was targeted by a Brazil-based Russian spy who attempted to gain access to the judicial body as an intern, according to Dutch intelligen­ce.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada