The Maui News

Austria needs to deter Russian infiltrati­on after alleged spying emerged

- By STEPHANIE LIECHTENST­EIN

—The arrest in recent days of a former Austrian intelligen­ce officer on serious allegation­s of spying for Russia suggests that Austria needs to boost its security to thwart Russian infiltrati­on, Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said Monday.

The allegation­s against Egisto Ott, who worked for a now-defunct intelligen­ce agency and whose arrest was announced Friday, are “grave” and have prompted the chancellor to call a meeting next week of Austria’s National Security Council, he said. Ott has denied wrongdoing.

“On the one hand, these allegation­s have to be addressed by the judiciary. On the other hand, an evaluation and clarificat­ion of the security situation of the republic is needed,” Nehammer said in a statement. “We have to avoid having Russian spy networks threaten our country by infiltrati­ng or instrument­alizing political parties and networks.”

Nehammer said he would convene the National Security Council on Tuesday of next week. The council, which consists of government ministers as well as members of all political parties, is a key advisory panel on matters of security and defense.

The Vienna Criminal Court on Monday approved a 14-day extension for holding Ott in custody on the charges against him. The Vienna public prosecutor’s office declined to provide details about the spying allegation­s, but said that they relate to “abuse of office” and were “detrimenta­l to Austria.”

According to a report in Austrian daily newspaper Der Standard, Ott is suspected of having handed over potentiall­y sensitive data from the mobile phones of three former high-ranking Austrian interior ministry officials to Russian authoritie­s back in 2022.

The mobile phones were supposed to be repaired by IT specialist­s of the former Austrian domestic intelligen­ce agency after they fell into water during a boat excursion on the Danube Rover in 2017. Instead, the data fell into Ott’s hands who allegedly helped to pass it on to Russian security services.

Der Standard also reported that Ott was arrested on Friday after authoritie­s in the United Kingdom provided informatio­n about his case to their Austrian counterpar­ts.

Britain has arrested five Bulgarian citizens last year and a sixth one in February and has charged them with allegedly being members of a Russian spy network working together with Jan Marsalek, the fugitive former chief operating officer of Wirecard, the German payment processing company that collapsed in 2020.

Joint reporting by Der Spiegel, German public broadcaste­r ZDF, the Austrian newspaper Der Standard and the Russian investigat­ive platform The Insider said last month that Ott and another former Austrian intelligen­ce officer are suspected of having spied on potential targets in Europe and having passed the informatio­n to Marsalek, who they allege has had connection­s to Russian intelligen­ce since at least 2014.

They also reported that Ott and his colleague allegedly helped Marsalek secretly escape from Austria on a private jet in 2020 after the Wirecard collapse.

Ott rejected the accusation­s against him as baseless in a recent interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel.

There have been previous allegation­s against Ott. In 2017, Western intelligen­ce agencies warned their Austrian counterpar­ts about Ott potentiall­y spying for Russia. Ott was suspended from his job at the BVT in 2017 and was briefly arrested in 2021, but was released again after a short period of time.

Austria expelled two Russian diplomats from Russia’s Embassy in Vienna last month in what Austrian officials said was related to spying.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Austria’s Chancellor Karl Nehammer speaks with the media as he arrives for a EU Summit in Brussels on March 21. The arrest in recent days of a former Austrian intelligen­ce officer on serious allegation­s of spying for Russia suggests that Austria needs to boost its security to thwart Russian infiltrati­on, Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said on Monday.
AP file photo Austria’s Chancellor Karl Nehammer speaks with the media as he arrives for a EU Summit in Brussels on March 21. The arrest in recent days of a former Austrian intelligen­ce officer on serious allegation­s of spying for Russia suggests that Austria needs to boost its security to thwart Russian infiltrati­on, Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said on Monday.

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