Russia frees Estonian officer in spy swap

Camille Elemia

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Russia frees Estonian officer in spy swap

AFP

Kohver's defense lawyer says the swap was "organized on the political level" and was timed to boost Russia's image ahead of President Vladimir Putin's speech at the UN on Monday, Sept 28

MOSCOW, Russia – Russia’s security service said Saturday, September 26, it exchanged Estonian officer Eston Kohver, convicted for espionage, for an imprisoned Russian spy, in a cross-border bridge swap with its Baltic neighbour. 

Kohver, who was sentenced in August to 15 years in jail on espionage and other charges, was exchanged for Aleksei Dressen, a former Estonian security official serving a 16 year sentence for spying for Moscow, the FSB security service said.

“On September 26, Estonian special service officer Eston Kohver, who was convicted in Russia for espionage, was exchanged for Aleksei Dressen, a former officer of Estonia’s security police, who has been serving a sentence for giving secret data to the Russian FSB (Federal Security Service),” said a statement carried by Russian news agencies. 

The swap took place on a bridge over the Piusa River that separates Russia’s western Pskov region and Estonia’s Polva county.

Kohver’s defense lawyer Mark Feigin said the swap was “organized on the political level” and was timed to boost Russia’s image ahead of President Vladimir Putin’s speech at the United Nations on Monday. 

“It’s all happening ahead of Putin’s visit to the UN tomorrow. There are no other reasons,” Feigin wrote on Twitter.

Dressen was convicted in 2012 together with his wife Victoria, who was given a suspended sentence. He was found guilty of treason for funnelling classified information to Russia for years after Estonia’s 1991 independence. 

Kohver’s conviction on August 19 drew ire from EU and US after Tallinn said he was kidnapped at gunpoint from Estonian territory, with Washington saying Moscow should immediately return him to Estonia.

The scandal was the latest in a series of spy cases involving Russia and the Baltic states, former Soviet republics turned NATO and EU members increasingly wary of Russia’s intentions following the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.

Russia’s relations with the West have hit their lowest point since the Cold War over the conflict in Ukraine, leading to a spike in spying claims. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!
Face, Person, Human

author

Camille Elemia

Camille Elemia is a former multimedia reporter for Rappler. She covered media and disinformation, the Senate, the Office of the President, and politics.