Walter Biot, 54, was arrested on Tuesday in a Rome carpark
moments after he was seen receiving 5,000 euros ($5,900) from
the Russian official in return for information contained on a
USB key, a police source said.
Italy, which has traditionally enjoyed better relations with
Moscow than many other Western states, immediately expelled two
Russian diplomats in retaliation and denounced the alleged
espionage as a "hostile act".
The Russian foreign ministry was quoted as saying on Wednesday
that it regretted the expulsions, but that they did not threaten
bilateral relations.
Biot, who is being held in custody and faces a minimum 15 years
in jail if found guilty of military espionage, has not released
any statement since his arrest.
In the interview with Corriere della Sera daily his wife,
Claudia Carbonara, said she did not know if he had a lawyer. She
told the newspaper she knew nothing of what had happened, but
also said that Biot had not handed over anything compromising,
just "the minimum he could give".
"He is not stupid or irresponsible. He was just desperate," she
was quoted as saying.
Carbonara, a psychotherapist, said their large family was in
financial difficulty and could not make ends meet on his salary
of 3,000 euros a month, with expenses including 1,200 euros a
month on their mortgage.
Reuters could not reach Carbonara for comment.
Other newspapers reported that Carbonara had struggled to work
as a result of coronavirus lockdowns over the past year.
Biot has the rank of a frigate captain and had had a desk job
since 2010. He was currently working at the defense ministry
department tasked with developing national security policy and
managing part of relations with Italy's allies, a ministry
source told Reuters.
The Russian official had diplomatic immunity so could not be
held, but was one of the men expelled by the Italian foreign
ministry, a diplomatic source said.
Russia's Nova news agency said that two Russians who worked at
the military attache’s office flew back from Rome to Moscow on
Thursday, naming them as Dmitry Ostroukhov and Alexei Nemudrov.
Italy has relatively good ties with Moscow, and has been at the
forefront of efforts to try to end international sanctions
against Russia. Looking to show goodwill, Russia last year sent
military doctors and medical equipment to help Italy battle an
initial outbreak of coronavirus.
($1 = 0.8524 euros)
(Reporting by Crispian Balmer; Additional reporting by Andrew
Osborn in Moscow; Editing by Frances Kerry)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|