Russia has detained a Frenchman working for a Geneva-based conflict mediation NGO, accusing him of gathering military information and failing to register as a “foreign agent”.
Under Russian laws used to crack down on Kremlin critics, anybody who receives foreign support or who is under “foreign influence” must register as a “foreign agent”.
The Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue told AFP it was trying to secure the release of a member of its team.
“We are aware that Laurent Vinatier, an adviser at the Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, has been detained in Russia,” it said in a statement. “We are working to get more details of the circumstances and to secure Laurent’s release.”
A video published by Russia’s investigative committee, which investigates major crimes, showed a man being approached by officers on a restaurant terrace before being led into a police van.
In Paris, the foreign ministry said it was aware of the arrest of the French citizen and said its Moscow embassy had requested consular protection for him and also more details from the Russian authorities.
“It is one of our citizens working for a Swiss NGO … it was in no way someone who was working for France,” Emmanuel Macron told French television in an interview Thursday evening. “We will follow this closely and he will receive all consular protection,” the French president said.
According to its website, the Geneva-based centre “works to prevent and resolve armed conflicts around the world through mediation and discreet diplomacy”.
Russia has previously used “foreign agent” charges as a pretext to arrest people before levelling more serious charges. But the law has typically been used to target Russian citizens and domestic critics of the Kremlin including activists, campaigners and independent journalists.
The investigative committee said on Thursday that law enforcement had detained a French citizen “suspected of collecting information on Russia’s military activities”.
“This information, if obtained by foreign sources, could be used against the security of the state,” it said.
The suspect, who was not formally identified, had “repeatedly visited Russia, including Moscow, where he held meetings with Russian citizens”, it added.
Vinatier is a researcher, consultant and political analyst whose work focuses on Russia and other post-Soviet states, according to his LinkedIn profile.
The investigative committee said he had been charged with failing to submit documents needed for “inclusion in the register of foreign agents”, a charge that carries up to five years in prison, if convicted.
US-Russian journalist Alsu Kurmasheva was arrested on a similar charge last year, before a more serious case of spreading “false information” about the army was levelled against her.
France’s DGSI domestic intelligence agency has since Monday been holding a 26-year-old Russian-Ukrainian man on suspicion of planning a violent act after he injured himself in an explosion.
The case is being handled by Paris anti-terror prosecutors but it has not been made public what target he is suspected of having planned to attack.