Russia prisoner swap includes Tromsø university attendee Mikushin

This photo was taken when Mikhail Mikushin lived in Canada under the adopted name José Assis Giammaria. At the University of Calgary the man spent years studying Arctic security and geopolitics. In 2021, he moved on to Norway’s Arctic University in Tromsø. (Twitter)

The prisoner exchange between the West and Russia includes Mikhail Mikushin, the GRU affiliated charged with espionage in Norway.

He came to UiT- Arctic University of Norway in 2021 under the name José Assis Giammaria and presented himself as a Brazilian citizen interested in the university’s “hybrid threats” study program.

In October, 2022, the police arrested him. The man was first charged on suspicion of entering Norway under false pretence. Later it became known that he actually was a senior Russian military intelligence officer with the GRU.

His real name is Mikhail Valerievich Mikushin.

On Thursday, Norway’s Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre confirms that Mikushin is part of the multi-national western exchange of prisoners with Russia.

“Norway has contributed to the fact that a significant number of Russian and foreign human rights activists and journalists, who have been imprisoned in Russia for a long time, are now allowed to travel out and in freedom,” Store says in a statement.

Media outlet The Insider was first to report that Mikushin was one of eight Russians citizens arrested in the West to be exchanged in the ongoing prisoner swap on Thursday.

Mikushin has been in custody in Norway for nearly two years.

UiT The Arctic University of Norway opened its doors for the GRU officer that came to Norway under fake name. (Thomas Nilsen/The Independent Barents Observer)

Well-known Russian political prisoners and U.S. citizens take part in the exchang. Among them are Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reporter Alsu Kurmasheva.

Ilya Yashin, Vladimir Kara-Murza, Andrei Pivovarov and Oleg Orlov are four political prisoners said to be free as part of the exchange. The Insider has published the full list of names.

No official information is published, neither in Russia, nor in the West.

Foreign Minister under Boris Yeltsin’s first post-Soviet Government, Andrei Kozyrev, writes on X (formerly known as twitter) that he is happy for the release, but warns against new arrests.

At the time of publishing this article it was still unclear where the prisoner exchange will take place, but German media says a U.S. Transport plane went to to Ankara on Thursday at about the same time as an official Russian plane flew to the Turkish capital from Moscow.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada : Canadian military says it has tracked, stopped China surveillance in Arctic waters, The Canadian Press

Finland: Russian cyber attacks, espionage pose growing threat to Finnish national security, Yle News

IcelandIceland authorizes U.S. submarine service visits, Eye on the Arctic

Norway: Russian jamming disrupting GPS signals for Norwegian aviation almost daily, The Independent Barents Observer

RussiaRussia accuses US of stoking tensions in the Arctic, The Independent Barents Observer

Sweden: Russian spy ships surveying Nordic energy infrastructure, Radio Sweden

United States: Pentagon warns of potential Russian action in Arctic—including jamming GPS satellites, CBC News

Thomas Nilsen, The Independent Barents Observer

For more news from the Barents region visit The Independent Barents Observer.

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