National Post (National Edition)

WHERE IN THE WORLD IS ARJEN KAMPHUIS?

A cybersecur­ity expert with links to WikiLeaks is missing and conspiracy theories are rampant

- Henrik Pryser LibeLL in Oslo, Norway

In a remote Norwegian town north of the Arctic Circle, a cybersecur­ity expert with ties to WikiLeaks checked out of a hotel, dressed in khaki hiking gear and carrying heavy baggage.

That was on Aug. 20. No one has reported seeing him since.

The disappeara­nce of Arjen Kamphuis, 46, has so far flummoxed a widening police investigat­ion that has chased stray clues and false leads in Norway, Denmark, Germany, the Netherland­s and Sweden. Norwegian police have released statements saying that they have no idea whether he was a victim of foul play, but that they “are open to all possibilit­ies.”

The uncertaint­y, and Kamphuis’ links to WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy organizati­on that has run afoul of government­s and other powerful interests, has the internet buzzing with conspiracy theories. Some suggest a kidnapping — or worse — involving Russia, the CIA, MI6, Islamists or the Clintons, while others ask if he intended to disappear, possibly on some secret assignment for WikiLeaks.

Other spurs to speculatio­n include that Bodo, the town where he was last seen, is home to Norway’s main military airbase, that the armed forces’ joint operations centre is nearby, and that part of the country’s cyberdefen­ce centre is hidden in a mountain outside town. Investigat­ors have ruled out any connection between the military presence and his disappeara­nce.

Friends say Kamphuis, who is Dutch, was genuinely in Norway for vacation, had been there a few times before, and had plans to return to the Netherland­s.

“He’s an avid hiker and mountainee­r,” said Ancilla van de Leest, 33, a friend and prominent Dutch activist for online privacy rights.

On Twitter, WikiLeaks described Kamphuis as an “associate” of Julian Assange, the group’s founder. Assange has lived for years in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London to avoid arrest and what he fears would be extraditio­n to the United States to face prosecutio­n for publishing government secrets.

But Kamphuis’ precise relationsh­ip with WikiLeaks is unclear. Friends say he is not close to Assange, but he has reportedly offered training to WikiLeaks members relating to “Informatio­n Security for Journalist­s,” a handbook he co-wrote on how to shield communicat­ions and data from government surveillan­ce.

Bodo is on a peninsula bordering one of the hundreds of ocean inlets that crease Norway’s mountainou­s, wooded coastline. Police have reported that before heading north, Kamphuis bought a foldable kayak from an outdoor equipment store in the Netherland­s, and told the manager that he planned to paddle the fjords.

After leaving the Scandic Hotel in Bodo on Aug. 20, Kamphuis had planned on taking a 10-hour train ride south to Trondheim, Norway, van de Leest said in a telephone interview. Dutch police have said that he was booked on an Aug. 22 flight back to the Netherland­s.

He did not make the train or the plane, but he was not reported missing until Aug. 29, when friends and colleagues in the Netherland­s alerted Dutch police.

At first, the case was not taken seriously, van der Leest complained. But as days passed and search crews in and around Bodo failed to turn up any sign of Kamphuis, the investigat­ion intensifie­d, spurred on by online publicity campaigns, most of them using the hashtag #FindArjen.

The search has grown into a cross-border hunt for a man who specialize­s in evading detection. The Norwegian National Criminal Investigat­ion Service, Kripos, has assigned investigat­ors in Oslo to the case, and on Tuesday, it sent four officers to Bodo.

Dutch police searched Kamphuis’ apartment in Amsterdam, taking DNA samples from his toothbrush, van de Leest said.

Partial breakthrou­ghs have only added to the mystery. Police revealed that 10 days after Kamphuis had disappeare­d in the High North, someone tried to use his cellphone near the village of Vikesa, 1,000 kilometres south of Bodo, attempting to activate a German SIM card.

Unconfirme­d sightings of the missing man have been reported in Sweden and as far away as southern Denmark, in two towns on the North Sea coast, Esbjerg and Ribe. Those reports and the SIM card pulled German, Danish and Swedish police into the investigat­ion.

Hundreds of people are reported missing in Norway each year, and although most are located within hours or days, 15 to 30 per year are not found, officials say. Kayaking and mountain climbing accidents kill a handful of people each year, according to the Norwegian Maritime Authority and the Norwegian Mountain Climber Associatio­n.

“After all this, there is no scenario that I haven’t thought about. It could literally be anything,” van de Leest said.

“He wasn’t afraid to make enemies,” she added. “He did not ‘hide his opinions under a chair,’ as we say in Holland.”

HE DID NOT HIDE HIS OPINIONS UNDER A CHAIR.

 ??  ?? Arjen Kamphuis
Arjen Kamphuis

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