A view shows the Saint Petersburg City Court after a hearing in the case of Siberian physicist Anatoly Maslov who was arrested in 2022 on suspicion of treason, in Saint Petersburg, Russia May 24, 2023.
11:00 JST, May 25, 2023
ST PETERSBURG, Russia, May 24 (Reuters) – The first of three Russian hypersonic missile scientists to be arrested on suspicion of treason will go on trial next week, the court handling the case said on Wednesday.
The criminal case against Anatoly Maslov, 76, will open in St Petersburg’s city court on June 1, the court said on its website.
He and two colleagues at the same Siberian institute, the Khristianovich Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics (ITAM), have all been arrested on suspicion of treason in the past year.
All three are specialists in hypersonics – a field of key importance to the development of Russia’s next generation of missiles, capable of flying at 10 times the speed of sound.
The case is marked as “top secret” and will be closed to the media and public, the court said. It said Maslov’s custody was extended until Nov. 10 in a closed hearing on Wednesday.
Maslov was detained last June in Novosibirsk, the largest city in Siberia and one of Russia’s main science hubs. Soon afterwards he was sent to Lefortovo prison in Moscow, a former KGB interrogation site.
In St Petersburg, he has been placed in the FSB security service jail on Shalernaya Street where many Soviet dissidents were once held by the KGB, Maslov’s lawyer Olga Dinze told Reuters.
She declined to comment on the case, saying that “the situation is extremely difficult.”
Details of the accusations against the three men are classified, but the news portal of the science city where they are based said Maslov was suspected of handing secrets to China.
Two sources have told Reuters that Alexander Shiplyuk, the director of ITAM, is suspected of passing secrets to China at a conference there in 2017. They said he denies the charge, saying the information in question was publicly available online.
ITAM has extensive international links, and says on its website that it is registered as part of Russia’s military-industrial complex.
Colleagues of Maslov, Shiplyuk and the third arrested man, Valery Zvegintsev, last week published an open letter in their defense, warning that the prosecutions threaten to damage Russian science.
The Kremlin has said the three face “very serious accusations.” Last month the Russian parliament voted to increase the maximum penalty for treason to life imprisonment, up from 20 years.
Top Articles in News Services
-
Survey Shows False Election Info Perceived as True
-
Hong Kong Ex-Publisher Jimmy Lai’s Sentence Raises International Outcry as China Defends It
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average Touches 58,000 as Yen, Jgbs Rally on Election Fallout (UPDATE 1)
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average Falls as US-Iran Tensions Unsettle Investors (UPDATE 1)
-
Trump Names Former Federal Reserve Governor Warsh as the Next Fed Chair, Replacing Powell
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Producer Behind Pop Group XG Arrested for Cocaine Possession
-
Japan PM Takaichi’s Cabinet Resigns en Masse
-
Man Infected with Measles Reportedly Dined at Restaurant in Tokyo Station
-
Israeli Ambassador to Japan Speaks about Japan’s Role in the Reconstruction of Gaza
-
Videos Plagiarized, Reposted with False Subtitles Claiming ‘Ryukyu Belongs to China’; Anti-China False Information Also Posted in Japan

