A Russian spy, jailed in Germany with her husband last year, has been freed early and allowed to return home, media reports said on Friday, suggesting a possible prisoner swap.
The 48-year-old woman, known only by the pseudonym “Heidrun Anschlag,” was freed two days ago and returned to Russia while her 53-year-old husband, known as Andreas, remains in detention, the Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA) news agency and Focus magazine reported.
The man was jailed in July last year for six-and-a-half years and his wife for five-and-a-half years by the higher regional court in the southwestern city of Stuttgart.
The pair were planted in former West Germany from 1988 by the Soviet Union’s then-KGB secret service and later worked for its successor the SVR, the court heard.
The couple obtained NATO and EU political and military secrets, focused especially on the relationship of NATO and the EU with Eastern European and Central Asian countries.
The pair had posed as Austrian citizens who were born and grew up in South America and were living what prosecutors called a “middle-class existence” as a cover for their clandestine activities.
Andreas was ostensibly an ordinary worker in the auto industry, living with housewife, Heidrun. According to Focus, the premature release could have been made as part of an exchange of agents between Russia and Germany.
Shortly after they were handed their prison sentences last year, a report emerged that Moscow wanted to exchange the married couple for at least one convict jailed in Russia on charges of spying for the West.
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