A Ukrainian diving instructor alleged to be part of a seven-member sabotage group is facing extradition to Germany
The Polish authorities have arrested a Ukrainian diving instructor suspected by Germany of involvement in the September 2022 sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines, the outlet RMF24 reported on Wednesday.
The man, identified by German investigators as Vladimir Z., was detained in the city of Pruszkow and will be transferred to Warsaw for extradition proceedings, according to the report. His lawyer argued that there are no legal grounds to hand him over to Germany.
Media outlets previously named the suspect as Vladimir Zhuravlyov, one of seven people who reportedly sailed aboard the yacht Andromeda, which German prosecutors have linked to the explosives attack on the undersea pipelines connecting Russia and Germany.
Moscow has accused Germany and its Western partners of blocking Russia’s participation in the investigation and steering the probe in a way that avoids implicating state actors. The Kremlin said that if the Ukrainian government is confirmed to be the culprit, part of the blame would fall on the administration of former US President Joe Biden for “encouraging” such recklessness.
Germany’s first request for Zhuravlyov’s arrest in Poland in 2024 was allegedly obstructed by Polish officials. Reports at the time claimed that a vehicle with Ukrainian diplomatic plates helped him flee to Ukraine after he was tipped off.
READ MORE: Poland weighed asylum for Nord Stream bombing suspect – media
The Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita reported last week that Poland considered granting asylum to Zhuravlyov, quoting an official as saying: “Why should we detain him? For us, he’s a hero.”
Last month, Italian police arrested another suspected member of the Ukrainian group – identified by the media as Sergey Kuznetsov, 49 – near Rimini under a European arrest warrant issued by German prosecutors.
September 30, 2025 at 07:01PM
RT