The Morning Call

Nord Stream probe backs up sabotage, Sweden says

- By Jan M. Olsen

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Sweden’s domestic security agency said Thursday that its preliminar­y investigat­ion of leaks from two Russian gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea “has strengthen­ed the suspicions of serious sabotage” as the cause and a prosecutor said evidence at the site has been seized.

The Swedish Security Service said the probe confirmed that “detonation­s” caused extensive damage to the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 pipelines last week. Authoritie­s had said when the leaks off Sweden and Denmark first surfaced that explosions were recorded in the area.

The agency, which said what happened in the Baltic Sea was “very serious,” didn’t give details about its investigat­ion.

But in a separate statement, Swedish prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist said “seizures have been made at the crime scene and these will now be investigat­ed.”

Ljungqvist, who led the preliminar­y investigat­ion, did not identify the seized evidence. Ljungqvist said he had given “directives to temporaril­y block (the area) and carry out a crime scene investigat­ion.”

Now that the initial probe is completed, a blockade around the pipelines off Sweden will be lifted, he said.

The government­s of Denmark and Sweden previously said they suspected that several hundred pounds of explosives were involved in carrying out a deliberate act of sabotage.

The leaks from Nord Stream 1 and 2 discharged huge amounts of methane into the air.

Last week, undersea explosions ruptured Nord Stream 1 and its sister pipeline, Nord Stream 2, at two locations off Sweden and two off Denmark. The pipelines were built to carry Russian natural gas to Germany.

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