Russia to expel Japanese diplomat arrested by Putin’s secret police on suspicion of ‘spying on China’ after ‘being caught red-handed’
- Russia accused a Japanese diplomat of spying on country in ‘Asia-Pacific region’
- Motoki Tatsunori, based in Vladivostok, was arrested by Putin’s secret police
- He allegedly had been seeking information on the impact of Western sanctions
Russia detained a Japanese diplomat accused of being caught ‘red-handed’ trying to buy state secrets and for spying on a ‘country in the Asia-Pacific region’.
Motoki Tatsunori, the Japanese Consul General in Vladivostok, was arrested for allegedly soliciting ‘restricted’ information about an unnamed country in the Asia-Pacific region – which is speculated to be China.
The FSB, the KGB´s successor agency, released a statement about the matter, accusing Tatsunori of gathering secret information on Russia and ordered him to leave the country within 48 hours.
The statement said: ‘A Japanese diplomat was detained red-handed while receiving, in exchange for financial reward, restricted information about Russia´s cooperation with another country in the Asia-Pacific region.’
The FSB also accused the diplomat of seeking out information on ‘the impact of Western sanctions’ on the surrounding Primoriye region, according to news agencies.
Russia’s FSB reportedly caught Japanese diplomat Motoki Tatsunori ‘red-handed’ gathering secret information spying on a ‘country in the Asia-Pacific region’
Motoki Tatsunori is the Japanese Consul General in Vladivostok, but has been ordered to leave the country
The Kremlin has repeatedly referred to Japan as a ‘hostile’ country since slapping sanctions on Moscow after Russian troops entered Ukraine
The FSB said it had lodged a protest with Tokyo through diplomatic channels and Russia’s foreign ministry said Tatsunori had been declared persona non grata and ordered to leave the country within 48 hours.
The Kremlin has repeatedly referred to Japan as a ‘hostile’ country, a designation it shares with the US, EU countries and their Western allies, since Tokyo joined them in slapping sanctions on Moscow after Russian troops entered Ukraine on February 24.
Japanese authorities have not yet commented on the incident.
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