
Türkiye arrests Russian pension fund embezzlement suspect
Investigators believe Islam Seinaroyev, who headed the SFR's branch in Russia's Republic of Ingushetia from 2012, was among the leaders of a criminal group which stole more than 2 billion rubles (around $24.5 million) in state money between 2019 and 2021 by illegally recalculating pensions without informing residents.
Sources told RTVI on Monday that Seinaroyev had been detained in the Turkish port and resort city of Antalya on the country's Mediterranean coast. He did not resist arrest, the source added.
The Turkish authorities are now preparing to extradite the former official to Russia, according to the broadcaster.
The sources claimed that Seinaroyev had 'felt completely safe' in Türkiye, where he engaged in business activities such as wholesale supplies of strawberries and bananas, and renting out his real estate.
A Moscow court issued an arrest warrant for Seinaroyev in October 2023 after he fled abroad.
Another alleged key figure in the fraud scheme that involved around 40 people – the former head of the Russian Post branch in the republic, Magomed-Bashir Kalimatov – has been in custody in Russia since May 2024. Kalimatov faces up to 20 years in prison if found guilty of embezzlement and organization of a criminal group.
Russia and Türkiye signed a deal on mutual legal assistance in criminal cases and extradition in 2014, with Moscow ratifying it three years later. Last year, Russian Prosecutor General Igor Krasnov said the law enforcement agencies of the two nations have 'established productive working relations,' stressing that Ankara 'has begun actively extraditing persons' wanted by Russia.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
11 minutes ago
- Russia Today
Armenia to nationalize power grid owned by jailed Russian businessman
The Armenian National Assembly has adopted a draft law allowing for the nationalization of a major electricity provider owned by businessman Samvel Karapetyan, who was arrested last month on charges of calling for the overthrow of the government. Karapetyan, who owns the Electric Networks of Armenia (ENA), holds Russian and Armenian citizenship and has a net worth of some $5 billion. His detention came after he voiced support for the Armenian Apostolic Church (AAC) in its conflict with the country's authorities, led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. The standoff began when Pashinyan accused the AAC of corruption and called on its leader, Catholicos Garegin II, to resign, citing alleged moral misconduct. The AAC rejected the accusations and claimed the government was acting under the influence of 'Armenophobic' foreign forces. In a statement earlier this week, Karapetyan described Armenia as 'surrounded by hostile nations' and said it had become 'a center of geopolitical conflict.' He denounced the government's 'exceptional political incompetence,' particularly its move to distance the country from Russia. A heated altercation broke out during Thursday's debate in the National Assembly, when independent MP Hovik Aghazaryan alleged that the legislation was designed to stoke anti-Russian sentiment. Karapetyan's detention has triggered criticism from prominent members of the Armenian diaspora and the Orthodox Christian community, both at home and abroad. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow would assist Karapetyan if needed. 'For us, he is a Russian citizen,' Peskov told reporters last week, while adding that Russia did not wish to interfere in Armenia's internal affairs. Lawmakers passed the bill on Thursday in its second and final reading, with 65 votes in favor and 27 against. For the law to come into force, it must be signed by the president.


Russia Today
07-06-2025
- Russia Today
VIDEO shows Russian soldiers taking down Ukrainian drone with scissors
Russian soldiers have purportedly disabled a Ukrainian fiber-optic drone using scissors, according to a video posted on the Telegram channel Voennyi Osvedomitel (Military Informant) on Saturday. Unlike traditional FPV drones, these models do not rely on radio signals, making them resistant to electronic warfare, with both sides of the conflict deploying them. As the drone passed in an unspecified location in the forest, the troops identified its trailing fiber-optic cable, sprinted forward, and severed it with medical scissors. Moments later, the drone crashed and detonated, footage shows. Russia was first to mass-deploy these 'invisible thread' drones in mid-2024. The 'Prince Vandal of Novgorod' drone was developed by the Ushkuynik Scientific and Production Center in less than a year. The fiber-optic FPV drone has caused substantial damage to NATO-supplied equipment to Ukraine, with claims of up to $300 million in destroyed hardware, according to the head of Novgorod Region, Andrey Nikitin. The Times reported in May that Russia is beating Ukraine in 'the drone race' when it comes to both the production of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and their use on the battlefield. It pointed to the fiber optic drone types connected directly to their operators through a gossamer thin fiber optic thread that makes them difficult to detect or intercept. Russian UAVs are 'altering the physical make-up of the front line, the tactics of the war and the psychology of the soldiers fighting it,' the outlet said. Despite their anti-jamming advantages, fiber-optic drones have a restricted operational range determined by the length of the cable and potential visibility of it under certain environmental conditions.


Russia Today
22-05-2025
- Russia Today
US launched ‘largest-ever strike from aircraft carrier'
The US Navy conducted the largest-ever airstrike from an aircraft carrier during an operation in Somalia earlier this year, Admiral James Kilby, acting chief of naval operations, has said. The USS Harry S. Truman and its strike group 'launched the largest airstrike in the history of the world – 125,000 pounds (62.5 tons) – from a single aircraft carrier,' the US Navy's top admiral claimed at an event hosted by the Council on Foreign Relations think tank in Washington on Monday. A defense official told Business Insider on Wednesday that the bombing run took place on February 1 and involved 16 F/A-18 Super Hornets. According to US Africa Command, a total of 25 airstrikes against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) and Al-Qaeda affiliate group Al-Shabaab have been carried out by American forces in Somalia since January. The Truman carrier strike group, which had been deployed to the Middle East in the autumn, left the Red Sea earlier this month to participate in NATO drills in the Mediterranean before heading back to its home port of Norfolk, Virginia. Over the last half a year, it has played a key role in US efforts to prevent Houthi fighters from targeting shipping off Yemen's coast. The Truman conducted 670 strikes against the Houthis and intercepted around 160 enemy drones and missiles during the period, Kilby said. The Houthis 'are not China, but they are a threat, and they are hunting our ships. Understanding that and not being dismissive about that and being prepared is what we are focused on now,' the admiral stressed. The Truman's stay in the Red Sea was marred by several incidents. In December, one of the warships in its strike group shot down an American F/A-18 in what the US military later described as an 'apparent case of friendly fire.' In late April, an F/A-18 and a tow tractor fell overboard from the carrier's hangar bay as the ship was maneuvering to avoid an attack by the Houthis. Earlier this month, the Truman's arresting cables failed during the landing of another F/A-18, sending the jet, which costs an estimated $60 million, overboard.