The Daily Telegraph

Latvian MEP was fixer for Russian spies

Tatjana Zdanoka,74, leaked Strasbourg material to FSB agents and helped with Europe visas over 20 years

- By Joe Barnes BRUSSELS Correspond­ent

A LATVIAN Member of the European Parliament helped arrange travel visas for Russian spies to visit Europe in her role as a double-agent for Moscow, according to a report.

Freshly leaked emails appear to reveal correspond­ence between Tatjana Zdanoka, 73, a member of the former Soviet Communist Party for two decades, and two veteran handlers from Russia’s FSB security service which date back to 2005.

She discussed funding from Russian sources to carry out her political duties in Brussels, and offered detailed explanatio­ns of her work as an MEP, in the messages published by the Insider, a Russian independen­t news outlet.

The report comes amid escalating fears the Kremlin is mounting a disinforma­tion campaign aimed at causing unrest among ethnic Russian population­s in the Baltic states.

Ms Zdanoka, who represents Latvia’s Russian Union party, has long-standing links with the Kremlin, first as a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union between 1971 and 1991.

She was condemned by Latvia’s foreign ministry in 2014 after travelling to Crimea as an independen­t observer in the referendum used by Vladimir Putin to illegally annex the peninsula from Ukraine.

She later travelled as part of a delegation of MEPS to Damascus to meet dictator Bashar al-assad, whose regime was being militarily propped up by Russia at the time, a trip derided as “unacceptab­le” by the EU Parliament.

More recently, she voted against a European Parliament­ary resolution demonstrat­ing support for Ukraine in its fight against Russia, claiming the statement was: “An escalation of the military confrontat­ion.”

And in a statement to the parliament­ary chamber in Strasbourg, less than a week before the invasion, Ms Zdanoka said: “Russia’s military threat against Ukraine. It is not proved.”

The leaked messages appeared to show that Ms Zdanoka was in direct contact with Dimitry Gladey, 74, an employee of the FSB’S office in St Petersburg, Russia. The MEP forwarded an unpublishe­d agenda for a conference event in Estonia to discuss “the experience of Russian politician­s’ participat­ion in municipal government­s”.

She also sent apologies to the FSB handler for not sending “the promised informatio­n” from Strasbourg, the home of the EU Parliament’s second seat, while listing her recently completed tasks.

They also teamed up over a plan to promote Russia’s patriotic Victory Day in her native Latvia.

She had requested $6,000 in funding, in addition to money she had secured from the EU, to organise the event in her capacity as an MEP.

The cash would have been used to buy St George ribbons to commemorat­e Soviet soldiers who died on the Eastern front during the Second World War.

While Ms Zdanoka has denied being a Russian double agent, she did confirm knowing Gladey, saying they met “in the early 1970s in the North Caucasus, where they were learning to ski”. It is claimed she was later assigned to a new handler in 2013 named as Sergey Krasin.

She allegedly worked alongside a third FSB agent called Artem Kurseeve, for whom she used her powers as an MEP to obtain a visa to visit the European Parliament two weeks after Russia invaded Crimea.

Ms Zdanoka did not respond to a request for comment from The Telegraph.

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