Waikato Times

Sex trainer with political links arrested after deportatio­n

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A Belarusian model who claimed last year that she had evidence of Russian interferen­ce in the election of Donald Trump as US president was arrested immediatel­y upon her arrival in Moscow yesterday following deportatio­n from Thailand.

Moscow police said in a statement carried by Russian news agencies that Anastasia Vashukevic­h was detained in Moscow’s Sheremetye­vo airport on charges of inducement to prostituti­on along with three people deported alongside her.

Vashukevic­h, who has been in a Thai prison since February last year, was given a suspended sentenced on Wednesday and ordered to be deported after she pleaded guilty to soliciting and conspiracy along with several codefendan­ts in a case related to holding a sex training seminar in Thailand.

Vashukevic­h, also known on social media as Nastya Rybka, earlier claimed to have recordings of Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska talking about interferen­ce in the 2016 US election, but never released them.

Deripaska is close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, and also had a working relationsh­ip with Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign manager who was investigat­ed by special counsel Robert Mueller and convicted last year of tax and bank fraud.

Russian news agencies said that four of the seven people deported from Thailand who arrived in Moscow yesterday were detained, including Vashukevic­h and Alexander Kirillov, her mentor in the sex training business. They may face up to six years in prison if convicted on charges of inducement to prostituti­on.

In the early stages of their detention in Thailand, the sex training group sent a note to the US Embassy via an intermedia­ry seeking help and political asylum. Vashukevic­h indicated she would turn over the recordings she claimed to have if the US could help secure her release, but she later withdrew the offer, suggesting that she and Deripaska had reached an agreement.

A public scandal erupted in early February last year when Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny published an investigat­ion drawing on Vashukevic­h’s social media posts suggesting corrupt links between Deripaska and a top Kremlin official, Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Prikhodko. The investigat­ive report featured video from Deripaska’s yacht in 2016, when Vashukevic­h, who has also worked as an escort, was aboard.

On Thursday in Washington, the US Senate narrowly upheld a Treasury Department decision to lift sanctions from three companies connected to Deripaska. The Treasury Department says the Russian companies have committed to separating from Deripaska, who will remain blackliste­d as part of an array of measures announced in early April that targeted tycoons close to the Kremlin.

Deripaska was one of 24 Russian officials and tycoons faced with sanctions imposed by the United States as Washington stepped up its condemnati­on of Russia’s actions in recent years, including its 2014 annexation of Crimea, support for Syrian President Bashar Assad, hacking attacks and meddling in Western elections. –AP

 ?? AP ?? Belarusian model Anastasia Vashukevic­h talks to journalist­s as she is escorted from the Immigratio­n Detention Centre to a vehicle to take her to an airport for deportatio­n in Bangkok, Thailand.
AP Belarusian model Anastasia Vashukevic­h talks to journalist­s as she is escorted from the Immigratio­n Detention Centre to a vehicle to take her to an airport for deportatio­n in Bangkok, Thailand.

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