Bellingcat can confirm that three members of the delegation attending the peace talks between Ukraine and Russia on the night of 3 to 4 March 2022 experienced symptoms consistent with poisoning with chemical weapons. One of victims was Russian entrepreneur Roman Abramovich.
Abramovich, along with another Russian entrepreneur, had taken part in the negotiations alongside Ukraine’s MP Rustem Umerov. The negotiation round on the afternoon of 3 March took place on Ukrainian territory, and lasted until about 10 pm.
Three members of the negotiating team retreated to an apartment in Kyiv later that night and felt initial symptoms - including eye and skin inflammation and piercing pain in the eyes - later that night. The symptoms did not abate until the morning.
The next day the group of negotiators drove from Kyiv to Lviv on the way to Poland and then Istanbul, to continue informal negotiations with the Russian side. A Bellingcat investigator was asked to help provide an examination by chemical weapons specialists.
Based on remote and on-site examinations, the experts concluded that the symptoms are most likely the result of international poisoning with an undefined chemical weapon.
An alternative less likely hypothesis was use of microwave irradiation. The symptoms gradually subsided in the course of the following week.
The three men experiencing the symptoms consumed only chocolate and water in the hours before the symptoms appeared. A fourth member of the team who also consumed these did not experience symptoms.
That's intentional poisoning, not international.
According to two consulted CW experts and a doctor, the symptoms were most consistent with variants of porphyrin, organophosphates, or bicyclic substances. A definitive determination was not possible due to the absence of specialized laboratory equipment near the victims.
The experts said the dosage and type of toxin used was likely insufficient to cause life-threatening damage, and most likely was intended to scare the victims as opposed to cause permanent damage. The victims said they were not aware of who might have had an interest in an attack
Bellingcat chose not to report this story earlier due to concern about the safety of the victims. Given the choice of the targeted individuals to speak up, Bellingcat and its investigative partner @the_ins_ru intend to publish an investigation into the presumed poisonings.
The US military conducted an operation on Jan 3 to capture President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela. Bellingcat geolocated videos of helicopters involved in the raid, piecing together potential movements of the assault force
The operation included air strikes targeting military sites, and a raid at Maduro’s residence inside Fort Tiuna in Caracas. In addition to armed helicopters, jets and drones provided cover for the assault force, according to the US military.
One video shows what appears to be 9 helicopters, including 7 Blackhawks and 2 Chinooks, flying in formation in the Fort Tiuna area as explosions occur. tiktok.com/@ceciarmy/vide…
Bellingcat’s work in 2025 verified war crimes, exposed deepfake abuse, and challenged disinformation. We want to uncover wrongdoing. We can with your support:
This is how we cut through the digital noise to tell stories that matter. bellingcat.com/donate
We've reported on conflicts around the world — from Myanmar to Gaza, Sudan to the DR Congo, Ukraine and beyond — verifying footage of war crimes, human-rights abuses and attacks on civilians. Read our latest on the reconstruction of Mariupol: bellingcat.com/news/europe/20…
In May we identified the person behind MrDeepfakes — one of the largest providers of non-consensual deepfake pornography. The platform was shut down after the investigation, and politicians from two European countries called for the extradition of its owner. bellingcat.com/news/2025/05/0…
An investigation by Bellingcat and @LloydsList found that Saudi Arabia joined the countries importing grain directly from a sanctioned port in occupied Crimea. Meanwhile Russia attempts to secure recognition of the Ukrainian territory via a US-led peace plan. bellingcat.com/news/2025/12/1…
Using Satellite imagery and Automated Identification System (AIS) data from Lloyd’s List Intelligence we show that a Russian owned bulk carrier sailed from Sevastopol to Saudi Arabia twice in recent months.
On both journeys, the ship turned off its AIS location data, hiding its presence in the port of Sevastopol. But satellite imagery confirms the ship was present at the port’s grain terminal. Satellite imagery: @vantortech
Russian state media are today alleging that a Bellingcat reporter was involved in an attempt to hijack a Russian fighter plane.
We would like to make clear that Bellingcat had absolutely no involvement in the alleged activities and the accusations towards us are entirely false.
The individual detailed in Russian media as a Bellingcat reporter has never worked for us in any capacity and we do not know who they are.
The picture and name in the press pass published in RU media does not depict any of our staff members or contributors. If they exist, we are unaware of them ever engaging with us.
The press pass is also not remotely like any Bellingcat ID or documentation.
The largest aid flotilla in history has been attacked twice in two days whilst in port in Tunisia. Open source analysis suggests an incendiary munition is to blame, contradicting official statements. bellingcat.com/news/2025/09/1…
On September 8 the main vessel in the flotilla, known as ‘the Family’ was struck by what witnesses claimed was a drone. Caught on another boat's camera, a flaming object had fallen onto the Family Boat from above.
Tunisian officials stated that there was “no evidence of any hostile act or external targeting”, claiming the resulting fire was due to “a lighter or cigarette butt”.
A new report by Bellingcat’s Justice & Accountability (J&A) Unit and @GLAN_LAW detailing the use of cluster munitions in civilian areas in Kharkiv at the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine is published today. j-and-a.glanlaw.org/kharkiv
The report is based on 32 in-depth investigations of separate incidents that took place between February and April 2022. It offers one of the most detailed looks yet at the use of cluster munitions against civilian areas in the early stages of Russia’s full scale invasion.
Bellingcat’s J&A Unit worked on this report as a self-contained entity separated (‘firewalled’) from the rest of Bellingcat, ensuring that accountability work was conducted independently from other investigations, preventing possible bias.