Five suspected of spying for Russia arrested under Official Secrets Act

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Three out of the five have also each been charged with possession of false identity documents with improper intention.


Five people suspected of spying for Russia have been arrested under the Official Secrets Act.

Three of them also face other charges after being found with multiple passports from different countries.

The three charged under the Identity Documents Act were named as:

• Orlin Roussev, 45, of Princes Road, Great Yarmouth
• Biser Dzambazov, 42, of High Road, Harrow
• Katrin Ivanova, 32, of High Road, Harrow



Image:
Biser Dzambazov and Katrin Ivanova

The five arrested are:

• A 45-year-old man in Norfolk
• A 42-year-old man in west London
• A 32-year-old woman in central London
• A 31-year-old man in west London
• A 29-year-old woman in north London

All were arrested in February.

Roussev, Dzambazov and Ivanova had 19 passports, driving licences, identity cards and residence permits from countries including the UK, France, Italy, Bulgaria, Spain, Greece, Croatia, the Czech Republic and Slovenia.

The three of them have been remanded in custody and will appear at the Old Bailey on a date still to be agreed.

What we know about those charged

All three are believed to be Bulgarian, while Dzambazov and Ivanova are reportedly in a relationship, said Sky’s crime correspondent Martin Brunt.

Ivanova describes herself on LinkedIn as a laboratory assistant for a private health business.

She has posted videos online to promote a social platform she set up with Dzambazov for the Bulgarian community in the UK, saying they can help people gain access to English language courses.

A post promoting the network says the couple can also help Bulgarians “obtain documents necessary for living and working” in London.

They say they were “guided by their sense of justice” to do this – and it was not motivated by making money.

A neighbour of the pair said they did not notice any suspicious behaviour and they were “very unobtrusive, you didn’t get to know them at all”.

“People have been coming and going in that place for several years now so we didn’t think anything of it,” they said.

Roussev is listed at Companies House as an officer for a company called MyTotal TV Ltd, along with two others. His LinkedIn says he used to be an adviser to the Bulgarian ministry of energy.

The 31-year-old man and 29-year-old woman arrested have been released on bail until September.

Metropolitan Police’s counter-terrorism command is leading the investigation.



Image:
Katrin Ivanova pictured in a video she posted online promoting her social platform for Bulgarians in the UK



Image:
The former home of Biser Dzambazov and Katrin Ivanova in north west London

A former British spy has told Sky News that producing multiple types of identification is “extremely helpful and useful… from a counterintelligence perspective”.

Christopher Steele, who ran the Russia desk at MI6 in London between 2006 and 2009 and worked there in the 1990s, said: “I think it’s early days yet to make any definitive judgements about what’s behind this. Clearly, the government appears to believe that they were working for the Russian state, Russian intelligence.”

He added: “It’s an impressive operation. It will act as a deterrent, I think, for others.

“But of course Russia is effectively at war for the moment and Russia and Putin will stop at very little to pursue their state objectives, whether it’s on the battlefield or in the sort of espionage elements of areas of the UK and Europe.”

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