Estonia claims that Svetlana Burtseva wrote a ‘Russian hybrid war’ handbook
File photo: The old town main square in Tallinn, Estonia © Jens Kalaene/picture alliance via Getty Images
Estonia has accused reporter Svetlana Burtseva of treason, violating sanctions on Russia, and writing a book on “hybrid warfare” that sought to discredit state institutions.
Burtseva, 57, used to work for Sputnik Estonia until Tallinn banned it in 2019. She then allegedly wrote for the portal Baltnews, which the Estonian authorities claim is part of the sanctioned Rossiya Segodnya media group.
“Her texts were published in online news serving the interests of Russian propaganda,” State Prosecutor Eneli Laurits told the state broadcaster ERR on Tuesday, after the hearing at the Harju County Court.
According to prosecutors, Burtseva continued to write for Russian media after the EU ban and wrote a book titled ‘Hybrid War for Peace,’ under the pseudonym L.B. Svet.
“The content of the book belittles the Republic of Estonia and is thus aimed at dividing Estonian society and discrediting the Republic of Estonia and its institutions,” Laurits told the newspaper Postimees.
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Laurits also claimed that Burtseva enrolled in a master’s program at the Sevastopol State University in Russia, from 2019 to 2021.
“She completed a training program on information and hybrid conflicts, which was supervised and led by the head of a private intelligence company registered in Russia and a former FSB counterintelligence officer,” Laurits told Estonian media. “The goal of the two-year master’s program is to prepare international media workers and analysts who could be on the front lines of Russia’s fight against hybrid threats.”
Burtseva has been in custody since late March but was only brought to court this week. Her trial is scheduled to start November 1. If found guilty under Article 235.1 of the Estonian Criminal Code, she faces up to six years in prison.
“This is unacceptable. All she is accused of is writing articles on the Internet and this is considered a violation of sanctions,” her lawyer Sven Sillar told Baltnews.
Sillar has moved to include Finnish lawyer Anastasia Lukkarinen as defense counsel. The Estonian courts said they would approve the motion if she could document her credentials.
Burtseva became a naturalized citizen of Estonia in 1994. The authorities claim she continued to produce media content for Baltnews under the pseudonym Alan Torm, between 2020 and 2023. This means she “cannot be considered an independent, objective and neutral journalist,” according to Laurits.