Cape Argus

Mystery illness linked to Russian intelligen­ce unit

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THE mysterious so-called Havana Syndrome symptoms experience­d by US diplomats in recent years have been linked to a Russian intelligen­ce unit, according to a joint media investigat­ion released yesterday.

Havana Syndrome was first reported in 2016 when US diplomats in Cuba’s capital reported falling ill and hearing piercing sounds at night, sparking speculatio­n of an attack by a foreign entity using an unspecifie­d sonar weapon.

Other symptoms, including bloody noses, headaches and vision problems, were later reported by embassy staff in China, Europe and the US capital

Washington. The diplomats may have been targeted by Russian sonic weaponry, according to the joint report by The Insider, Der Spiegel and CBS’s 60 Minutes.

The year-long investigat­ion “uncovered evidence suggesting that unexplaine­d anomalous health incidents ... may have their origin in the use of directed energy weapons wielded by members of (the Russian GRU) Unit 29155,” the report said.

Russia’s 29155 unit is responsibl­e for foreign operations and has been blamed for several internatio­nal incidents, including the attempted poisoning of defector Sergei Skripal in

Britain in 2018. Moscow dismissed the allegation­s as “groundless” yesterday.

“This topic has been talked up in the press for many years already. And from the very beginning most often it’s linked to the Russian side,” Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said.Washington closed its Havana immigratio­n office in 2018, partly in response to fears that the condition – officially known as anomalous health incidents (AHIs) – was a result of microwave or other electronic attack.

But intelligen­ce agencies concluded in March 2023 that “there is no credible evidence that a foreign adversary has a weapon or collection device that is causing AHIs.”

Washington announced the reopening of its immigratio­n office in Havana in August 2023. The joint investigat­ion suggests the first cases of Havana Syndrome may have occurred in Germany two years earlier than the cases reported in Havana in 2016 that gave the syndrome its name.

“There were likely attacks two years earlier in Frankfurt, Germany, when a US government employee stationed at the consulate there was knocked unconsciou­s by something akin to a strong energy beam,” the report said.

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