Authorities have issued an Interpol Red Notice and arrest warrant against a woman from Ukraine identified as suspect in a bombing that injured a Ukrainian-born businessman sanctioned by Kyiv and two other people.
Monaco authorities have issued an Interpol Red Notice for a Ukrainian woman believed to have carried out a parcel bombing earlier this week that seriously wounded a Ukrainian-born oligarch and two others, including a 13-year-old.
An Interpol Red Notice is a request to locate and provisionally arrest a suspect. It is not an international arrest warrant.
The alert lists three charges: "attempted murder, placing an explosive device in a public place with criminal intent" and "criminal conspiracy."
What else do we know about the suspect and the case?
The Red Notice identifies the suspect as a 39-year-old woman, Anastasiia Berezovska, a Ukrainian national.
She is thought to have been dressed as — or at least mistaken for — a man around the time of the crime; initial reports based on CCTV footage in Monaco and as the suspect crossed the open border to France had referred to a male suspect.
The Interpol notice says Berezovska has dark hair and a tattoo, "possibly a snake," on her right arm. It also specifies that she speaks German.
The Reuters news agency on Friday cited an unnamed judicial source in Monaco as saying that she had since been spotted in Germany.
The woman had been living in Germany and authorities say she used a car with a German license plate.
German police searched her home on Thursday and said they would be handing over all evidence seized to the authorities in Monaco.
Yermolaiev has been sanctioned by Ukraine over his business activities in Russia-annexed Crimea [FILE: June 30, 2026] Image: Valery Hache/AFP
Authorities in Monaco had first issued an arrest warrant on Thursday.
"An arrest warrant has been issued for the suspect, who will be the subject of an Interpol Red Notice from this evening," the prosecutor's office said.
Monaco's public prosecutor, Stephane Thibault, said investigators had identified the suspect through "effective international criminal cooperation, both police and judicial."
What happened to Ukrainian oligarch Vadym Yermolaiev?
On Monday night, a blast at the entrance of a residential building in Monaco near the French border injured three people, two of them severely.
While Monaco authorities have not officially identified the victims, multiple media reports said the apparent target was Vadym Yermolaiev, a 58-year-old businessman born in Ukraine who holds Cypriot citizenship and is a Monaco resident.
The other two injured were Yermolaiev's partner and teenage son. By Wednesday, the businessman was no longer in a life-threatening condition, while his partner had not yet stabilized. The 13-year-old was reportedly stable.
Kyiv imposed sanctions on him in 2023, alleging he continued business activities in Russian-annexed Crimea and paid taxes to Moscow after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
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DefinitelyNotMeee on July 3rd, 2026 at 16:55 UTC »
"Tycoon" with a very interesting family business.
His son, Arthur Yermolaev, was one of four founders and leaders of a Ukrainian criminal group operating scam call centers that defrauded people all over the world (but mainly in the EU) of ~100 million. He was arrested in Estonia, but his family essentially bought his release for 8.5 million (laws only apply to the poor).
https://en.bb.lv/article/emergencies-and-crime/2026/04/30/in-estonia-the-organizer-of-a-100-million-scheme-will-be-released-to-return-money-to-victims-97894
TwinSeal on July 3rd, 2026 at 11:15 UTC »
Monaco's image as an untouchable haven for the ultra-rich just took a real hit. What's interesting is how this looks like a cross-border operation, with a Ukrainian suspect living in Germany and using a German-plated car, suggesting European countries are becoming the operating theater for Russia-Ukraine proxy conflicts spilling outward. The police statement that it wasn't the work of one person points to organized networks, which raises bigger questions about how porous these wealthy enclaves actually are.
DWNews on July 3rd, 2026 at 10:28 UTC »
Hi, this is Rob in the DW newsroom where we’re following this story that is taking plenty of twists and turns: A bombing in the usually secure, playground of the rich: Monaco.
Now, Interpol has revealed the suspect in the bombing that reportedly targeted a Ukrainian tycoon with links to Russia was a female dressed as a man.
The woman from Ukraine had apparently last been living in Germany and used a car with a German license plate.
Authorities say a hunt for the suspect is underway, but that the attack was not just the work of one person.