The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Exiled scientist wins fight to stay in Britain

Man convicted of fraud and given jail term in Russia

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An exiled Russian scientist has won a court battle to remain in Scotland after he claimed he would be murdered if he is returned to his homeland.

Alexander Shapovalov, 57, fled to the Highlands in 2015 after being convicted of fraud in Russia.

He was fined £13,000 and also sentenced to 10 years in jail in his absence.

Mr Shapovalov now lives in, Lochaber, with his partner and two children.

The former director general with the Scientific Centre of Applied Chemistry in St Petersburg, which has links with the military, fought an attempt by the Russian government to extradite him.

He sought political asylum as he believes president Vladimir Putin wants him dead.

Following a hearing at Edinburgh Sheriff Court, Sheriff Nigel Ross has refused to grant the extraditio­n request to return Mr Shapovalov to serve his jail term and face further fraud charges.

The sheriff said extraditin­g him would be in breach of his human rights and found that Russia had abused the court process as the fraud charges were unfounded.

In a scathing judgment, Sheriff Ross said Dr Shapovalov would face an unfair prosecutio­n, possible torture and inhuman conditions in the Russian prison system.

He said: “I accept the evidence led on behalf of Dr Shapovalov as credible and reliable.

“The evidence for the Russian Federation was poor quality, inadequate and misdirecte­d, and I reject it as any reliable source of informatio­n.

“The evidence is clear and uncontradi­cted that Dr Shapovalov will not receive a fair trial on the accusation matter, and did not receive a fair trial on the conviction matter.”

Russia applied for extraditio­n and the Crown Office was obliged to start civil action under proceeds of crime legislatio­n.

Sheriff Ross criticised the Russian government for refusing to co-operate with the case in the wake of the Salisbury poisoning incident.

The court was told that Dr Shapovalov took up his former position in 2009 but

“Dr Shapovalov will not receive a fair trial on the accusation”

found the institute, which employs 25,000 engineers and scientists, to be in “very bad shape”.

He told the court that he found out that an assistant director was using the centre’s money to buy properties, adding: “When I found this out, I said ‘this is unacceptab­le’.

“He decided to bankrupt our institutio­n and I started criminal proceeding­s,” he said.

Dr Shapovalov claimed that he was threatened by figures with links to President Putin.

He was arrested and held at a police station for 36 hours and was told that he would be charged with a serious offence.

Asked what would happen if he was returned to Russia, Dr Shapovalov replied: “I would be killed.”

 ??  ?? EXILE: A court ruled Alexander Shapovalov would not receive a fair trial in Russia
EXILE: A court ruled Alexander Shapovalov would not receive a fair trial in Russia

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