Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Trial opens for Swedish army consultant accused of attempted espionage for Russia

Cars pass the building of the Federal Security Service in Moscow, 24 July, 2017
Cars pass the building of the Federal Security Service in Moscow, 24 July, 2017 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Gavin Blackburn
Published on
Share Comments Add Euronews on Google
Share Close Button

The trial, scheduled to last three days, is being held largely behind closed doors, given the sensitive nature of the information involved.

A 34-year-old former consultant for the Swedish military went on trial on Monday, accused of trying to pass classified information to Russia's intelligence services.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

The man is a Swedish citizen, born to Iranian parents, who worked as an IT consultant for the military from 2018-2022, according to court documents and the military.

Arrested in January, he was charged with attempted espionage.

He is accused of having tried, during a trip to Moscow between November and December 2025, to disclose secret information "notably to the Russian FSB and GRU services, in exchange for protection as well as the future acquisition of Russian citizenship," prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist told the court.

He was initially suspected of espionage but was finally charged with attempted espionage.

Dressed in a green sweater and a white T-shirt, he appeared calm sitting next to his lawyer, taking notes on his computer at the outset of the trial, a journalist with the AFP news agency reported.

Swedish military personnel participating in Exercise Aurora 26 at Väddö Military Training Area in Stockholm, 5 May, 2026
Swedish military personnel participating in Exercise Aurora 26 at Väddö Military Training Area in Stockholm, 5 May, 2026 AP Photo

His father, the only member of the public in the courtroom aside from a few media representatives, was also taking notes on small scraps of paper.

Hanna Lindblom, the accused's lawyer, stressed that he denied the charges.

The trial, scheduled to last three days, is being held largely behind closed doors, given the sensitive nature of the information involved.

It is a "unique" case in Sweden, which "imposes particular demands on both the parties and the court," the prosecutor argued.

The evidence includes written exchanges between the suspect and Russian intelligence in which he highlights his military profile.

In a video excerpt from a report broadcast on 10 February 2026 on state-controlled broadcaster RT, shown during the trial, an FSB representative interviewed anonymously states that the accused had handed over "a large quantity of documents" to them.

The spokesperson also says that the suspect appeared "unstable" during their meeting and that the FSB had therefore been "sceptical about the information he provided."

In 2024, the man set up a company specialising in cybersecurity which, according to public records, was supposed to focus on "offensive cyber operations."

Additional sources • AFP

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments Add Euronews on Google

Read more

Sweden eases rules for teenage migrants facing deportation, migration minister says

Ukraine to buy up to 20 latest model Gripen jet fighters, Sweden to donate 16

Canada chooses Sweden's Saab in defence deal over US rivals, PM Mark Carney says