Los Angeles Times

Kiev arrests Russia news worker

Ukrainian bureau chief is accused of treason. Moscow condemns charges.

- By Mansur Mirovalev Mirovalev is a special correspond­ent.

KIEV, Ukraine — Authoritie­s in Ukraine have arrested a journalist with a Kremlin-funded news agency who they said justified Crimea’s annexation, supported pro-Russia separatist­s and now faces up to 15 years in jail for treason.

The arrest of Kirill Vyshynsky, a Ukrainian national and head of the Ukrainian branch of RIA Novosti, Moscow’s lavishly funded propaganda arm that broadcasts in dozens of languages, is widely seen here as a response to Russia’s informatio­n campaign that began after pro-Western protesters ousted Moscow-friendly President Viktor Yanukovich in 2014.

A court in the southern city of Kherson said Thursday that Vyshynsky does not qualify for bail and will be subject to the standard pretrial detention of 60 days.

He has not been formally charged, but prosecutor Valery Kharaim said in televised remarks that an expert who analyzed Vyshynsky’s reports found “evidence of treason.”

Vyshynsky was detained Tuesday after the SBU, Ukraine’s main security agency, searched his apartment here in the capital and found large amounts of cash and a Russian state journalism award for covering Moscow’s annexation of Crimea.

Vyshynsky was part of “subversive media structures” working in Ukraine, the security agency’s deputy director, Viktor Kononenko, said in televised remarks.

He said 47 people will be questioned as part of the investigat­ion.

Yuri Lutsenko, Ukraine’s prosecutor general, said that a wider network of Russian journalist­s has waged a “disinforma­tion war” against Ukraine and that investigat­ors had found that Ukrainian nationals who were involved had accepted Russian citizenshi­p. Dual citizenshi­p is illegal in Ukraine.

Vyshynsky admitted in televised remarks that he secretly received a Russian passport in 2015.

Russia condemned the arrest.

“We see this as outrage, a crackdown on the freedom of speech and an attempt of the Kiev regime to stifle any manifestat­ions of objectivit­y and an unbiased view on the developmen­ts in the country,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement Thursday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has called the ousting of his ally Yanukovich a “fascist coup” and said the subsequent annexation of Crimea followed a referendum.

But even Russia’s staunchest allies have not recognized the annexation that led to Moscow’s increasing internatio­nal isolation.

Russia also unleashed a propaganda campaign claiming that Ukrainian servicemen wear swastikas, that government-paid doctors harvest organs from detained pro-Russia separatist­s and that in July 2014 Ukrainian servicemen crucified a 3-year-old boy in the eastern town of Slovyansk.

This reporter was in Slovyansk the day after the execution supposedly took place and found no evidence of it.

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