The man made it across the border to Norway at Skrøytnes in Pasvikdalen, according to the police in Finnmark. The man was then arrested at 01.58 night to Friday. – The man was arrested by a border patrol from the Norwegian Armed Forces and the police. The man has applied for asylum in Norway, says chief of staff in Finnmark police district Tarjei Sirma-Tellefsen in a press release. Various Russian media and online opposition channels have mentioned that the man claims to be a defector from the notorious mercenary organization Wagner group. PST confirms to news that they have been notified of the case. – PST was informed about the incident shortly after it took place, says a communications adviser in the Police Security Service (PST) to news. At present, Bernsen cannot go into details of the man’s history and his background. He explains, however, that the service will monitor the case going forward. – It will be natural for PST to follow the case to assess whether it falls within our tasks, says Bernsen to news. Claims he has a background in mercenary activities news has spoken to the man’s lawyer, who confirms that the man the police have mentioned in connection with an illegal border crossing is his client. The lawyer will not say anything about what is the background for the man fleeing to Norway and asking for protection. – He has applied for political asylum in Norway. The asylum process is underway for him in the usual way. I don’t want to say anything about the basis for the asylum application, says lawyer Jens Bernhard Herstad to news. Herstad cannot at present answer what role the man may have had in Russian warfare – or whether the man actually worked for the Wagner group. The Wagner Group is known for very heavy-handed warfare. The company is said to have both been mercenaries on other continents, and participated in the war in Ukraine on the Russian side. The Russian websites claim that the man who has now escaped to Norway should have had a leadership role in the Wagner group, but that he defected. Escaped across the border to private houses Neighbors by Pasvikelva say that they discovered a lot of activity on the Russian side of the border at night. Snowmobiles, searchlights and lots of personnel. When the man got over the border, he is said to have sought out a private residence. There, the man asked for help, and the police were contacted. – The man must have visited a private house in the border area and asked for help. We were also notified by Russian border guards about the discovery of traces that could indicate that someone had crossed the border illegally. A search was then immediately initiated by the border guard and the police, says Tarjei Sirma-Tellefsen of the police in Finnmark. Both border guards from the Norwegian Armed Forces and the police then came to the scene and arrested the man. – We are now working to confirm the identity of the person, and are interviewing the man, says Sirma-Tellefsen. Meetings between Norway and Russia at the border Border Commissioner Jens-Arne Høilund confirms that he has had a meeting with his Russian counterpart after the incident. This is normal procedure following the Border Agreement from 1949. – It is normal for us to meet to investigate and ascertain what has happened. We have ascertained the facts: That there has been a border crossing. This meeting is part of the bilateral relationship between Norway and Russia, and has nothing to do with the police’s investigation, says Høilund to news. Russia has not asked for the man’s extradition. – They know the procedures we have in Norway, so they have not asked for it, says the border commissioner. Read more about the Wagner group: Watch the documentary on news TV: Wagner – Russia’s lawless army
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