New details of the Czech arms depot explosion in 2014 from Bellingcat, including details of a senior GRU leader's direct involvement, and details of other team members involved bellingcat.com/uncategorized/…
Bellingcat has established that the GRU operation which Czech authorities have linked to the explosion of the munition depot in Vrbetice on 16 October 2014, involved at least six operatives from GRU’s Unit 29155.
It was supervised personally by its commander, Col. Gen. Andrey Averyanov, a senior deputy to the head of the GRU, who traveled undercover to Central Europe at the exact time of the operation and left back to Moscow mere hours after the explosion.
This was one of only two known clandestine operations for which Gen. Averyanov has personally traveled abroad, indicating the significance of this subversive mission for the Russian government.
Gen. Andrey Averyanov is a high ranking military official who, based on telephone call records reviewed by Bellingcat, has a direct line of communication to both the chief of the GRU chief and to the Kremlin.
The operation also involved at least two GRU officers who traveled under diplomatic cover to Budapest, a roughly five hour drive from the munitions depot, shortly before the explosions.
Notably, at least one of the same diplomats traveled to a region within a similar range of Bulgaria’s capital several months later, during the days that Emilian Gebrev (pictured below) was poisoned with a chemical weapon by the members of the same GRU unit.
Travel data discovered by Bellingcat also points to the fact that the operation was initially likely planned for an earlier date, but was postponed by about one week due to unknown circumstances.
The operation appears to have involved several coordinated trips of members of unit 29155 to Czechia via neighbouring countries, as well as a preparation mission in Switzerland. More details to come later this week.
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Thanks to everyone who attended today's digital showcase from @zkharazian, who discussed how to track disinformation in an Armenian context.
You can watch a recording of the event here (~2.5 hours):
You can watch this Monday's digital showcase event, ran by @RuslanLeviev, here (Russian):
Our next digital showcase event will be @Soshnikoff on May 6th, with a presentation led in Russian on an investigation he conducted, and then on May 7, a presentation in Ukrainian from a journalist at @bihusinfo focusing on anti-corruption investigations using OSINT techniques.
Here, nighttime imagery from the @NASAEarth VIIRS sensor highlights bright-burning gas flares from oil wells south of Erbil.
This time lapse (captured between 2013 and 2017) also shows the period when ISIS captured Mosul.
@wammezz@oballinger@NASAEarth Gas flares are a major sources of air pollution. Combining VIIRS imagery with @ESA_EO Sentinel-5p data in @googleearth Engine, we can also see high levels of Nitrogen Dioxide around flaring sites, many of which are located near big cities
The Comité International Pour La Protection Des Droits de L'homme (CIPDH) bills itself as a human rights group with headquarters in Paris. But as @elisethoma5 discovered, this was far from the whole story … bellingcat.com/news/2021/04/1…
@elisethoma5 CIPDH, it transpires, has exaggerated an apparent relationship with the UN, issued what the European Commission describes as “fantasy passports” and even misappropriated the identity of several prominent individuals
@elisethoma5 Until last year, CIPDH stated on its website that it partnered with more than a dozen UN agencies. Yet not one of those agencies said they had heard of CIPDH when contacted by Bellingcat
@PostcodeLoterij Bellingcat has become known for high-profile investigations such as those that looked at the downing of MH17 and the poisoning of Alexey Navalny.
While we will always look to cover important issues such as these, we have big plans to cover more topics and regions.
@PostcodeLoterij The @PostcodeLoterij grant will help us produce more open source reporting on the likes of environmental and wildlife issues.
It will also help us explore how open source evidence can be used in national and international courts, advancing accountability.
Given the canal’s immense strategic importance, the ship’s predicament has attracted the attention of the world’s media.
Satellite imagery from the likes of @sentinel_hub shows the MV Ever Given lodged firmly in the canal. The ship is so big that it can be seen by simply typing “Suez Canal” into the platform's search field