Two men have been detained in Poland on suspicion of carrying out an attack on Russian opposition figure Leonid Volkov – an associate of Alexei Navalny – in neighbouring Lithuania last month.

The suspects – who are Polish citizens, according to the Lithuanian authorities – are facing charges of acting on behalf of a foreign country’s security services.

News of their arrest was announced on Friday morning by Lithuania’s president, Gitanas Nausėda. He thanked his Polish counterpart Andrzej Duda as well as the two countries’ law-enforcement agencies.

Volkov himself also thanked Poland and Lithuania for the work they had done in identifying the suspects. However, he added that it was also important to “investigate and to expose all the chain-of-command from Putin to the guy with the hammer” who attacked him.

Volkov served as chief of staff to Navalny during the latter’s election campaign in 2018, when he challenged Vladimir Putin for the presidency. In recent years, Volkov has been based in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius.

On 12 March this year, he was attacked with a hammer and tear gas outside his home in the city, leaving him with injuries, including a broken arm. At the time, Lithuania declared the incident to have been the work of Russia.

Soon after Nausėda’s announcement this morning, Polish police confirmed that, working with their Lithuanian counterparts, they had detained two people suspected of carrying out the attack. They later shared a video of armed officers conducting the raid that led to the arrests.

The two men were subsequently brought before prosecutors and then placed in temporary detention, say the Polish police’s Central Investigation Bureau (CBŚP), a unit tasked with tackling organised crime.

A spokesman for the Warsaw court dealing with the case told Reuters that the suspects were accused of “acting in an organised group, executing the orders of the special services of a foreign country”, and of damaging the health of a Russian citizen in Lithuania.

The deputy head of Lithuania’s criminal police, Saulius Briginas, told the media that the suspects were both Polish citizens, reports Reuters. Lithuania’s prosecutor general, Justas Laucius, also identified them as Polish, according to broadcaster TVN.

Yesterday, Poland announced the detention of a Polish citizen accused of working on behalf of Russian military intelligence, including as part of a plan to assassinate Volodymyr Zelensky during a visit to Poland. It remains unclear if that case is related to the arrests announced today.


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Main image credit: Ivan Zhdanov/Telegram

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