MOSCOW (Reuters) – A Russian court sentenced a man to eight years in prison on Thursday after finding him guilty of state treason for allegedly handing over secrets to China, the TASS news agency reported.
Vladimir Vasilyev, 52, was arrested in Russia’s eastern Siberian Zabaykalsky region that borders Mongolia and China in August 2019. He pleaded guilty to the charge of treason, TASS said.
His trial was held behind closed doors and its details were not made public because of its classified nature.
Vasilyev gathered and handed over information that constituted a state secret to China’s intelligence services, TASS cited a law enforcement source as saying.
The case points to the tensions behind the Kremlin’s push for closer ties with China since 2014, when relations with the West collapsed over Russia’s annexation of Crimea.
Last year state prosecutors charged a prominent Russian scientist with treason for allegedly passing secrets to China. Another scientist was detained in Siberia last October for allegedly passing technology to China.
There have been a spate of treason cases in recent months.
One case in particular, that of former newspaper journalist Ivan Safronov who denies wrongdoing, has sparked anger among his supporters about the secrecy surrounding the treason allegation against him that makes it difficult to scrutinise the case.
(Reporting by Tom Balmforth; editing by Alex Richardson)