Guard At One Of Putin's Palaces Flees To Ecuador, Criticizes War And Kremlin Leader

Authored by rferl.org and submitted by HydrolicKrane
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A guard at one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's residences in occupied Crimea has fled to Ecuador, calling the Kremlin leader a war criminal.

Vitaly Brizhaty, who worked on the Ukrainian peninsula for the Federal Protection Service (FSO), the Kremlin's bodyguard agency, told Dozhd TV in an interview that he opposed the war in Ukraine.

Brizhaty is the second member of the FSO to flee and publicly criticize the president over the invasion of Ukraine.

Brizhaty worked at Olivye, one of Putin's two palaces in Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014. RFE/RL's Crimea.Realities revealed the massive palace in Olivye in a 2021 report.

In the interview, Brizhaty said that Putin didn't trust his own guards. He said the Kremlin would announce Putin's arrival at two different airports in Crimea but that he could very well end up arriving by sea.

"That's how much this man fears for his life," he said.

Brizhaty claimed that FSO personnel were banned from communicating with Ukrainian relatives, citizens of the United States and European Union, or any people who oppose the war, under threat of criminal prosecution.

He said he feared punishment because one of his friends, a former classmate with whom he has remained in contact, now resides in the United States and has come out against the war. Brizhaty claimed that if his friend liked a pro-Ukrainian post on Instagram, he could come under investigation.

A few months after the start of the war, Brizhaty said he tried to quit the FSO but was told he would be sent to fight in Ukraine if he left the service.

In the meantime, his wife, a native of Crimea, applied for a residence permit in Ecuador as a qualified worker and received it. The permit extended to him as well.

As FSO and other Russian security-service personnel are not allowed to hold a foreign passport or residency permit, Brizhaty was dismissed and he immediately left with his wife for Ecuador.

Breakfast_on_Jupiter on September 11st, 2023 at 15:14 UTC »

Brizhaty said he tried to quit the FSO but was told he would be sent to fight in Ukraine if he left the service.

[...]

As FSO and other Russian security-service personnel are not allowed to hold a foreign passport or residency permit, Brizhaty was dismissed.

So he can't leave the service without the threat of being sent to the frontlines, but at the point getting a non-Russian residency permit, FSO just goes "oh okay then, you can leave."

No-Word-1996 on September 11st, 2023 at 13:09 UTC »

One of Vlad's many guards could make himself world famous at any moment and that has to make Putin soil his Depends.

RamaSchneider on September 11st, 2023 at 12:32 UTC »

In the interview, Brizhaty said that Putin didn't trust his own guards. He said the Kremlin would announce Putin's arrival at two different airports in Crimea but that he could very well end up arriving by sea.

I'm trying to imagine Putin and Kim actually being able to meet up at the same place at the same time as both operate in the same way regarding travel.