Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

. Last Updated: 06/15/2013

4 Russian Bikers Held as Spies in Iraq

The Moscow Times

The detained bikers have reportedly been beaten and might face espionage charges. Above, a biker on his motorcycle in Moscow.
Denis Grishkin / Vedomosti

The detained bikers have reportedly been beaten and might face espionage charges. Above, a biker on his motorcycle in Moscow.

Four Russian bikers who refused to obtain Iraqi visas looked set to be freed after five days in custody late Thursday following frantic diplomatic talks and growing anger among the biker community in Russia.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani promised Russia's ambassador to Iraq during a meeting that the bikers would be freed soon, Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich told reporters in Moscow.

"Let's hope that this is how it happens," he said in televised remarks.

Iraq's foreign minister confirmed to the BBC that the bikers would be let go.

The bikers, who were detained Sunday as they approached Baghdad, were themselves to blame for their predicament because they had crossed the Turkish border into Iraq without valid visas, Lukashevich said.

In addition, he said the bikers knew that they were breaking the law, because an Iraqi military patrol had detained them in the city of Kirkuk as they headed toward Baghdad. He said the bikers were only released after the Russian Embassy in Baghdad intervened.

Embassy diplomats warned the bikers not to resume their trip without visas, but the group pressed ahead anyway, NTV television reported.

Outside Baghdad, the bikers — Oleg Kapkayev, Alexander Vardanyants, Oleg Maximov and Maxim Ignatyev — were detained by men wearing military uniforms and taken to an Iraqi military base, news reports said.

Kapkayev managed to somehow send a text message to his biker friends in Russia that the four were accused of spying and had been threatened with 10-year prison sentences or possibly the death penalty, NTV said.

But Lukashevich denied that the bikers had faced punishment.

The appeal for help, however, rallied the biker community behind the group, and several biker clubs in Moscow got involved in trying to win the men's release.

Alexander Orlov, a member of the Moscow-based motorcycle club RAMCC, told RIA-Novosti earlier Thursday that the bikers have been severely beaten and dismissed talk that they might have been using forged visas.

He claimed that he was in continual contact with the men and a Russian diplomat in Iraq.

"They are among the most experienced motorcycle tourists in Russia," he said. "They have crossed the whole world. … The speculation that they forged the visas is mere nonsense."

It was unclear whether the detainees had been beaten.

Another biker club organized a rally outside the Iraqi Embassy in Moscow on Thursday afternoon.

State Duma Deputy Igor Igoshin also appealed to Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to intervene, and President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that the Foreign Ministry would do all it could to secure the bikers' release.

Putin has been forging good relations with the biker community in the past two years, riding motorcycles and attending biker events.





Comments via Facebook



Also in News

What the Papers Say, June 14, 2013

A roundup of today's Russian-language newspapers.

Today in History, June 14

108 years ago, on June 14, 1905, a mass revolutionary uprising took place onboard the Battleship Potemkin, marking the first, significant signs of discord in the Russian fleet.

Q&A: Siemens Executive Leverages Loyalty and Flexibility

His company's investment strategy and 160 years experience here have helped Dietrich Möller close deals and get ready for more.

Prokhorov to Skip Mayoral Election

Citing problems with transferring his foreign assets to Russia, billionaire businessman Mikhail Prokhorov announced Thursday that he would not run for mayor of Moscow, removing perhaps the strongest potential opponent to acting Mayor Sergei Sobyanin from the September vote.

Putin Says Government Faces Falling Revenues

In the coming years, the government will get less revenue than was expected before, and the budget plan for 2014-2016 has to be planned accordingly, President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday while presenting the budget plan to senior government officials and lawmakers.

Activists Protest 'Cruel' Animal Rights Bill

Dozens of opponents of an animal rights bill called "cruel" by activists gathered at the public reception office of the State Duma on Thursday to petition Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin to revise the legislation.



print




Most Read
advertising
Moscow Directory
DELIKATNY PEREEZD

Local & intercity moves...

LA BOTTEGA

Over 170 wines on the wine list, mainly from Italy, France and Spain...