Sjekk også russere som eier hytter nær forsvarsanlegg i Bardufoss https://tinyurl.com/ye2ad7a3 fra TV2 Det var også noen greier med den russiske ortodoks kirke som kjøpte einedommer i Norge. Noe ble visst kjøpt nær Haakonsvern. (Red.)
In August 2022, Andrey Yakunin reaches the top of
Kvasspiggen, one of the most spectacular peaks north on Spitsbergen, the
largest island of the Svalbard archipelago. The Russian, British citizen used a
small hobby drone to find the best route uphill. Photo: Private archive
Acquitted son of Putin ally will use
drone next time on adventure in Norway
"Absolutely," Andrey Yakunin
replies when asked by the Barents Observer whether he will use drone next time
on adventure in northern Norway and Svalbard.
By
Thomas Nilsen
April 05, 2024
Andrey Yakunin, the son of
ruler Vladimir Putin’s former closest allies Vladimir Yakunin was again
acquitted after the Hålogaland Court of Appeal in Tromsø refused the
prosecution’s appeal.
The case, that has been in and
out of Norwegian courts, started almost two years ago when police in Norway’s
northernmost region discovered that Yakunin had used a drone when climbing to
one of the mountain peaks north on Svalbard.
Yakunin had sailed to Svalbard
with friends in his private sailing yacht, the Firebird.
He was detained in Hammerfest, one of the northernmost ports on mainland
Norway.
The Barents Observer was first to tell that
the arrested Russian, British citizen was the eldest son of Vladimir Yakunin,
the former head of Russian railways and a close Putin associate.
The case soon made world-wide
headlines.
Like his father is also Andrey
Yakunin himself a wealthy businessman. Today he lives in Italy, running a real
estate investment company. After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in
2022, Yakunin moved away from any investment positions in
Russia.
Police in Norway argued that
Russian citizens are not allowed to fly drones in the country, as it violate
the sanctions regime.
Andrey Yakunin spent 52 days
in detention in Tromsø. The case has been two rounds in the court system, the
second after the Supreme Court sent the case back to the district court
for renewed handling, where Yakunin was acquitted once more. The prosecution then
appealed the verdict again.
Sanctions
When the case was heard in the
Supreme Court in 2023, the district court’s acquittal was overturned suggesting
that a hobby drone should be considered an aircraft for sanctions regulations.
A question in the court
hearings has also been whether it makes a different that Yakunin has dual
Russian-British citizenship. When arrested in Hammerfest, Yakunin presented his
British passport, but police soon also found his Russian passport onboard the
yacht.
This week, the Court of
Appeal made a final ruling that Yakuin is innocent and allowed to fly
hobby drone when on adventure.
“From day one I have been
saying that there is no offence for a British man to fly a drone in Svalbard.
However, it has taken almost 2-years and a complicated legal process, with 52
days in detention to get this message across. But common sense and justice have
inevitably prevailed in the end. I have never committed any criminal offence,”
says Andrey Yakunin.
Will come back with drone
“I am just a yachtsman and an
outdoor sports enthusiast who happens to enjoy filming nature’s beauty,” he
says.
Will you use a small hobby drone next time you are on
adventure-tour to Svalbard or northern Norway?
“Absolutely! Would just make
double sure that my paperwork is in order,” Yakunin answers with a smile.
The St. Petersburg born
businessman says to the Barents Observer that he encourage everyone to check
their DJI App for relevant settings before taking off with a drone next time in
Norway.
“From the 1st of January there
is an RI requirement for operations in EASA Airspace for C1-C3,” Yakunin
informs.
It regulates the use of the
smallest low risk civil drones, like those you could buy for a few hundred
euros from an electronic store or on internet.
Law suit in process
Andrey Yakunin’s lawyers say
it could come a law suit against Norwegian authorities.
“This case has been an
enormous burden for our client, both because he was falsely accused of having
committed a criminal offense and because of the massive media attention the
case received both nationally and internationally, says lawyer John Christian Elden.
“He feels that the Norwegian
authorities should be held accountable for the emotional and material costs
accrued as a result of the unfair charges,” Elden makes clear.
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