German police arrest three men over alleged Russian parcel bomb plot
It follows high-profile cases of parcels detonating at European transport depots last year and numerous other suspected Russian sabotage attempts across the continent.
Intelligence officials have in recent years warned of a growing threat from hybrid attacks in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
On Wednesday, German prosecutors released details of the alleged plot, in which the three men sent two parcels in late March.
Authorities said it was a test run involving GPS trackers to scope out routes for future arson and bombing attacks.
The suspects are believed to have been in contact with individuals working for Russian state institutions, federal prosecutors said in a statement.
Two of the men, identified in line with German privacy laws only as Vladyslav T and Daniil B, were arrested over the weekend in Germany.
Another, identified as Yevhen B, was taken into custody on Tuesday in Switzerland.
The Kremlin did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the arrests.
"We know that Russia is trying to destabilise Western democracies by all means — including targeted sabotage and perfidious intelligence methods," German Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig said in a statement on the arrests.
"Our security authorities … are keeping a close eye on this threat."
Last summer, a series of parcels blew up at depots in the UK, Germany and Poland. Security officials later said the parcels were part of a test run for a Russian plot to trigger explosions on cargo flights to the United States.
Russia denied any involvement.
German prosecutors declined to comment on any connection between the latest case and the incidents of last summer.
They did not specify whether the two parcels sent by the Ukrainian suspects were intended for air or overland transport.
The three Ukrainian nationals had prepared two "test parcels" containing GPS trackers to be sent from Cologne in western Germany in late March after telling one or more Russian state actors that they were prepared to carry out attacks, according to the prosecutors' statement.
Investigators believe the parcels were intended to scout out possible routes.
The Swiss Justice Ministry said Germany had requested extradition of the suspect arrested in Switzerland, but declined to give further details.
This alleged plot is part of a wider accusation by European nations of Russian sabotage, which western intelligence services link to European support for Ukraine.
On the weekend, Polish authorities alleged Russian government institutions were behind a Warsaw shopping centre fire which broke out in May last year.
Russian involvement is also suspected in another shopping centre fire at an IKEA in Lithuania.
It has also been accused of severing undersea cables in the Baltic Sea.
ABC/Reuters

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
4 hours ago
- News.com.au
Russian strikes kill three in east Ukraine
Russian strikes in eastern Ukraine killed three people, including a mechanic at a railway station, and wounded at least 12 people, authorities said Tuesday. "Russian terrorists inflicted a massive strike on the railway infrastructure of Lozova," the Ukrainian Railways company said in a Telegram post. Ukraine's railways have been heavily targeted by Russia's army throughout its invasion, launched in February 2022. Moscow has escalated aerial attacks even ahead of a Friday deadline by US President Donald Trump to make progress towards peace or face massive sanctions nears. The nighttime strikes in the city of Lozova in the eastern Kharkiv region left a passenger train mangled and charred, and damaged the station building with a pile of rubble on the platform. "A duty mechanic of one of the units was killed," Ukrainian Railways said, adding that several trains have been rerouted. President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had launched more than 25 Iranian-designed Shahed drones at the city, striking "civilian infrastructure". "The railway was damaged, including a depot and a station," he said on social media, adding that 10 people were wounded in the attack. Ukraine's air force said Russia fired 46 attack drones and one ballistic missile in the barrage -- down from the several hundred that Moscow has the capacity to launch. Lozova Mayor Sergiy Zelensky called the strike "the most massive attack" on the city since the beginning of the war. A separate Russian strike on Ukraine's northeast Sumy region killed two more people at an "agricultural enterprise", authorities said. Trumps deadline looms after three rounds of peace talks in Istanbul failed to make headway on a possible ceasefire, with the two sides remaining far apart. Russia's army has escalated attacks and accelerated its advance on the ground to capture more Ukrainian territory. US envoy Steve Witkoff will visit Russia this week, where he is expected to meet President Vladimir Putin, ahead of the Friday sanctions deadline.

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
Farmers use tractors to spray manure on squatters
This is the moment raging French farmers spray hordes of squatters with manure in a bid to expel them from their land. Furious workers sprayed the faeces over their farm in Hautes-Vosges, France after reportedly 'not receiving' any help from police to remove an 'illegal gypsy camp'. Footage shows the tractors circling the stationary white caravans and releasing streams of the brown sludge liquid. Meanwhile, members of the community appear running after the vehicles in a bid to stop the onslaught of excrement. One man is even captured jumping onto a moving tractor and frantically knocking on the driver's window. In the minute-long video, some six tractors are seen covering the land in the stinking slurry - a mixture of manure and water. Last year, a similar tactic was adopted by British it farmer Jack Bellamy when he caught a camper on his land. He jumped in his tractor and drove up alongside the trespasser unleashing a 15-second blast of slurry. The camper, dressed in a red top and a white sun hat, is seen desperately trying to zip up his tent before diving behind it as a wall of excrement is showered on him. Jack, 29, is heard saying: 'I'll tell you what chap, have a bit of this.' The hapless cyclist is seen cowering for shelter as his entire tent and bike are covered in the brown stuff. Farmer Jack, a third generation farmer from Tavistock, Devon in South West England, last night told The Sun: 'I left him there covered in slurry. 'He never said a word. He couldn't really argue with that. 'They come up from the towns and think they can do what they want.' The beef and sheep farmer said he was annoyed because he's had trouble from trespassers before and there are two campsites almost a kilometre from his field. He added: 'He just didn't want to pay.' Jack said he spotted the camper as he started work in his John Deere tractor at 6am on Tuesday. He said: 'I went out in the morning because I had to get on. 'When I looked in the field I saw a tent on the freshly cut grass. 'There was someone camped right up against the hedge. 'I'm sure he had a nice evening there, but he didn't have a very nice wake up call. 'He must've heard the tractor coming because he was out of his tent.'

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Fatigue is setting in': Ukrainian ambassador says Putin does not want to end war
Ukraine's Ambassador to Australia Vasyl Myroshnychenko says the Russia-Ukraine conflict will continue as Vladimir Putin believes he has the "upper hand". 'It's up to Putin to decide when it is going to be over,' Mr Myroshnychenko told Sky News Australia. 'It doesn't look like he wants to end; he feels like he is at an upper hand. 'Fatigue is settling in because it's been a four-year war, you know, Putin planned to take over Kyiv in three days, take over Ukraine in six weeks … he didn't succeed.'