
Ex-Russian MP probed over attempted coup
Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) has opened a criminal case against former State Duma MP Ilya Ponomarev, accusing him of plotting a coup and forming a terrorist organization. The announcement was made by the agency in a press statement earlier on Wednesday.
Ponomarev began serving as a State Duma MP in 2007 but fled Russia in 2014 amid embezzlement accusations. A year later, he was stripped of parliamentary immunity when Russia's Investigative Committee opened a criminal case against him, accusing Ponomarev of stealing 22 million rubles ($241,000) from the Skolkovo research center. He was placed on the federal wanted list.
Since leaving Russia, the former MP has been a radical opponent of the Russian government and a self-styled representative of the 'Russian resistance'. He moved to Ukraine, where he obtained citizenship in 2019, and has repeatedly called on Russian citizens to join Kiev's forces and violently seize power in Russia. Last year, the FSB launched a criminal case against the former lawmaker on charges of terrorism and treason.
The new case against Ponomarev was opened in connection with his ties to the Congress of People's Deputies (CPD), a Polish-based group whose aim is 'a violent seizure of power and change of the constitutional order in the Russian Federation,' according to the FSB. The agency says the former lawmaker has described the group, which he founded in 2022, as 'the new government of Russia in exile.' In footage accompanying the FSB statement, which features a number of interviews with Ponomarev, the former MP himself calls his organization Russia's 'proto-parliament.'
According to the security service, Ponomarev has been working on getting the CPD recognized as the legitimate power in Russia by the Ramstein group, a bloc of Western nations supporting Kiev in the conflict with Moscow, also known as the Ukraine Defense Contact Group (UDCG). The FSB stated that the CPD has attracted over 60 former Russian politicians to its ranks since its inception, while developing and adopting more than 30 normative acts, such as the Constitution of the 'New Russia', as well as acts 'On the Transitional Parliament' and 'On the Resistance Movement', which are all illegal under Russian law.
The FSB alleges that Ponomarev's plans involve seizing power in Russia by force. In order to accomplish this, the former lawmaker has been collaborating with one of Kiev's paramilitary units, which is considered a terrorist group in Russia, the FSB stated. The agency did not mention the name of the unit in its statement but accompanied it with footage of Ponomarev taking part in activities of the 'Russian Freedom Legion', a Ukrainian paramilitary association that has been officially recognized as a terrorist organization by Russia's Supreme Court.
The FSB opened a criminal case against Ponomarev on two charges – 'Violent Seizure of Power or Violent Retention of Power' and 'Organization of a Terrorist Community and Participation in It'. He is facing up to 20 years in prison if convicted.
The former lawmaker has authored a book titled 'Does Putin have to Die?', in which he puts himself forward as a candidate for interim leader of Russia. In footage provided by the FSB, one of his supporters claims that Ponomarev 'personally urged' them to 'physically eliminate Putin.'
Hashtags

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


Russia Today
3 days ago
- Russia Today
Russian woman arrested for leaking military secrets to Ukraine
A Russian woman suspected of treason has been detained in Novorossiysk, a major port city on the Black Sea in southern Russia, the Federal Security Service (FSB) announced on Thursday. The agency said she gathered and sent information on Russian military assets to Ukrainian intelligence. The FSB stated that the suspect worked on a civilian vessel in the ports of Novorossiysk and Sochi. During this time, she allegedly initiated contact with a pro-Ukrainian terrorist group, which the FSB said is controlled by Ukrainian intelligence services. The woman is accused of collecting details regarding the locations of Russian Navy vessels and air defense sites and sharing them with her Ukrainian handlers. 'No damage was allowed to be inflicted on military equipment or personnel of the Russian Armed Forces due to timely measures taken,' the statement reads. The FSB's branch in Krasnodar Region has opened a criminal case under the article for high treason. The woman has been placed in pretrial detention. The offense carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. The agency has also shared a video of the woman's arrest. In the clip, when confronted about passing information about military facilities to a foreign government, she said she 'didn't see anything terrible in it.' The video also included a recorded confession in which the woman said she was contacted by a representative of Ukrainian intelligence. 'He offered me monetary compensation for cooperation. I agreed. Later, he gave me tasks to collect information about the locations of military facilities in Novorossiysk, Sochi, and Sevastopol,' she said. The suspect stated that she sent the information to a person named 'Maxim' via Telegram and acknowledged her guilt. In a separate message, the FSB warned that Ukrainian intelligence services are increasingly using Telegram and WhatsApp to recruit Russian citizens for reconnaissance and sabotage activities. Earlier on Thursday, the Russian security services reported the arrest of another woman in St. Petersburg who has also been charged with collecting data on Russian military personnel on behalf of Ukrainian intelligence and aiding in the organization of an act of terrorism. The woman allegedly helped establish the residences of Russian servicemen, as well as their vehicles and those of family members 'for the purpose of preparing and carrying out terrorist attacks against them,' the FSB said. The suspect faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.


Russia Today
4 days ago
- Russia Today
Kiev-orchestrated bomb plot thwarted in Moscow Region
Two Russian citizens who were collecting an improvised explosive from a cache outside Moscow, have been killed after opening fire on law enforcement, the Federal Security Service (FSB) reported on Wednesday. The deceased were identified by the agency as 'accomplices of Ukrainian special services,' who allegedly planned to use the device in a terrorist attack targeting a Russian military service member. According to the FSB, video footage appearing to show surveillance scenes along with the alleged IED proves that the bomb was ready for activation when it was seized. Plot details were subsequently discovered on suspects' phones and investigators are reportedly treating the case as a felony involving unlawful possession of explosives. The FSB frequently reports having disrupted terrorist operations allegedly coordinated by Ukrainian intelligence services, though suspects are typically apprehended alive. Exceptions have occurred, particularly when Kiev is believed to rely on radicalized individuals with links to international terrorist organizations. One such case was reported in April 2024, when two Central Asian Islamists allegedly planned to use first-person-view drones armed with explosive devices to target an oil refinery in Nizhny Novgorod Region. The FSB claimed the suspects were directed to retrieve the equipment from a cache and were given operational instructions by a 'Ukrainian handler.'


Russia Today
4 days ago
- Russia Today
Spies from EU aspirant arrested in Moscow
The Russian authorities have identified and arrested two Moldovan citizens who have confessed to working for Chisinau's intelligence agency, according to officials. The Federal Security Service (FSB) hid the identities of the two arrested men in footage released alongside its statement on Wednesday, but published photographs of and named their suspected handlers from Moldova's Security and Intelligence Service (SIS). One of the suspected handlers, Alexandru Sirbu, allegedly recruited both men on separate occasions in 2023 and 2024. The other, Adrian Popescu, was reportedly involved in their most recent deployment to Moscow, according to questioning of the suspects released by the FSB. The FSB said the two men arrived in the Russian capital under false identities. The agency also stated that the SIS cooperates with Ukrainian secret services to conduct missions that harm Russian national interests. Moldova, a former Soviet republic, is currently led by pro-Western President Maia Sandu, who also holds Romanian citizenship. Sandu has said that she aims to have the country join the European Union as early as 2028. Under her leadership, the authorities in Chisinau have cracked down on the opposition, including arresting the elected leader of the autonomous Gagauzia region. Sandu was reelected last November in a vote that critics say was manipulated by the government, alleging that opposition candidates were denied a fair opportunity to run for office. Moscow has charged that Sandu is steering Moldova in a dangerous direction, sacrificing national interests to serve Western agendas. In April, the FSB reported the case of a former SIS employee who was expelled from Russia last year after allegedly continuing to work as an undercover agent for Moldovan intelligence.