Germany charges Ukrainian over Nord Stream pipeline blasts


Gas leak from Nord Stream 2 pipeline as seen from an Danish F-16 interceptor jet over Bornholm island, Denmark, September 27, 2022. Danish Defence Command/Forsvaret Ritzau Scanpix/via REUTERS/File Photo

BERLIN, July 1 (Reuters) - ⁠Germany's top prosecutor has indicted a Ukrainian national over the 2022 explosions that ⁠crippled the Nord Stream gas pipelines under the Baltic Sea, moving one of ‌Europe's most politically sensitive sabotage cases closer to trial.

The indictment against the man, identified under German privacy rules only as Serhii K, was served on Wednesday, Berlin law firm Menaker, which represents him, told Reuters. It ​gave no details of the charges.

German public broadcaster ARD ⁠and media outlets Sueddeutsche Zeitung and ⁠Die Zeit, which first reported the move, said prosecutors accuse him of attacking civilian energy ⁠infrastructure, ‌causing an explosion and destroying structures. The federal prosecutor's office declined to comment.

BALTIC PIPELINE SABOTAGE

According to arrest-warrant documents, earlier press releases and a December 2025 detention ruling ⁠by the Federal Court of Justice, prosecutors allege that Serhii ​K helped coordinate a ‌team that used a sailing yacht, the Andromeda, to place explosive devices on ⁠the Nord Stream ​1 and 2 pipelines near Denmark's Bornholm island in September 2022.

Prosecutors and the court suspect the Andromeda's crew consisted of a coordinator, a skipper, four deep-sea divers and an explosives specialist. They say ⁠Serhii K is suspected of acting as the on-board ​coordinator and team leader, not as a diver or bomb expert.

Serhii K has denied involvement.

The blasts, which Russia and Western countries have both described as sabotage, knocked out key routes for ⁠Russian gas to Europe months after Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, deepening an energy crisis that hit Germany especially hard.

German courts have treated the case as falling within German jurisdictionbecause the damaged pipelines end at Lubmin in the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and their loss ​affected Germany's energy security and internal safety.

Court records cited by ⁠the ruling describe the suspect as a Ukrainian national who was an officer in a Ukrainian ​special forces unit at the time.

He was arrested in ‌Italy last August and transferred to Germany in ​November, where a judge activated a German arrest warrant.

(Reporting by Kirsti Knolle, writing by Miranda Murray and Maria Martinez; editing by Thomas Seythal and Kevin Liffey)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

French far right ponders life beyond Le Pen as appeal ruling looms
Analysis-Net-zero champion Europe snared by climate change on its doorstep
U.S. stocks close lower as investors weigh Fed comments
Extreme weather hits Canada with scorching heat, severe flooding
Flash: Belgium beats Senegal 3-2 after extra time to reach World Cup last 16
Russian air strikes kill 10, injure more than 50 in Ukraine's Kyiv
Russia's economy 80 pct adapted to external challenges: deputy PM
Poland's population edges up as foreign population grows
U.S., Iran talks conclude in Doha, focused on Strait
U.S. stocks close lower

Others Also Read