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CRIME

Wagner defector in Norway arrested for breaking immigration laws

A man claiming to be a former member of Russian mercenary group Wagner, who fled to Norway about 10 days ago, has been arrested for violating immigration law, police said Monday.

Pictured is Norway's border with Russia.
A Wagner group defector has been arrested. A general view of the Norwegian border crossing station at Storskog. Photo by Jonathan Nackstrand/ AFP.

Twenty-six-year-old Andrei Medvedev crossed the Russian-Norwegian border in the far north in the early hours of January 13th and sought asylum in the Scandinavian country.

His lawyer told AFP last week that he was “willing to speak about his experiences in the Wagner Group to people who are investigating war crimes”.

Medvedev claims to have fought in Ukraine as a member of Wagner for four months before deserting in November, when the paramilitary organisation led by
businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin allegedly extended his contract against his will.

A potentially valuable witness in shedding light on the group’s reported brutality in Ukraine, Medvedev has been questioned by Norwegian authorities since arriving in the country.

“The concerned individual has been arrested under the immigration law and it is being considered whether he should be processed for detainment,” Jon Andreas Johansen, a police official in charge of immigration affairs, told AFP in an email.

The police did not specify the exact reasons for his arrest and declined to comment further.

Medvedev’s Norwegian lawyer, Brynjulf Risnes, told AFP that Medvedev was arrested for refusing to follow restrictions imposed by police since his arrival in the country.

“There are naturally lots of security measures that have been taken and he finds it difficult to conform to them,” Risnes added. “He’s not accused of
anything.”

Many questions remain about Medvedev’s past and the circumstances of his escape, with some experts saying he could not have crossed the heavily guarded border without assistance.

He claims to have dashed across the frozen Pasvik river that marks part of the Russian-Norwegian border as he was chased by attack dogs and Russian border guards who fired at him. AFP has not been able to independently confirm his account of events.

Wagner has not denied he worked for the controversial fighting force. The Norwegian policy’s criminal investigations service Kripos, which is taking part in an international inquiry into war crimes in Ukraine, has been interrogating Medvedev since Saturday.

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UKRAINE

Norway plans ‘significant increase’ in aid to Ukraine

Norway, proportionally one of the largest donors to Ukraine, is considering a "significant increase" in aid, the Nordic country's foreign minister said Monday.

Norway plans 'significant increase' in aid to Ukraine

Norway has so for pledged some 75 billion kroner ($6.8 billion) in military and civilian aid to be distributed between 2023 and 2027.

Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre this weekend hinted that the amount could be increased.

“We’re talking about significant increase, I mean that is really relevant also compared with what we’ve done so far,” Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide told an Oslo press briefing.

The minister, who visited Ukraine last week, added that they had not yet decided on a precise sum.

Ukraine, which is short on ammunition and recruits, has recently struggled on its eastern front in the face of a Russian offensive.

But it received a shot in the arm this weekend when the US House of Representatives adopted a $61-billion-dollar aid plan after drawn-out negotiations.

“The alarm bell has sounded across the West … The sense is that we all need to do more and that nobody has done enough,” Barth Eide said.

“We have to actually look into how this ends strategically, and Russia winning is not an option,” he added.

Norway — a major oil and gas producer that has benefited greatly from surging prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — is one of the main contributors to Ukraine, according to a ranking by the Kiel Institute.

While in Kyiv, Barth Eide announced that Norway and Ukraine had agreed to a security deal which would be signed at the next meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Norway’s Gahr Støre — though a date has yet to be announced.

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