Celebrity chef arrested before Olympics as police raid house

Digital Staff
7NEWS Sport
A Russian celebrity chef has been arrested after his house was raided by police ahead of the Paris Olympics.
A Russian celebrity chef has been arrested after his house was raided by police ahead of the Paris Olympics. Credit: Getty

French police have arrested a Russian celebrity chef suspected of planning to destabilise the Olympics, just days before Paris 2024 gets underway.

The 40-year-old man was detained on Tuesday after police raided his house at the request of the Interior Ministry, the Paris prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

The evidence found at his home raised “fears of his intention to organise events likely to cause destabilisation during the Olympic Games”, it said on Wednesday.

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The chef has been placed in pre-trial detention and could face up to 30 years in prison.

Russia’s embassy in Paris said it had not received official notification of the detention.

“We proactively asked them for clarification. We will seek a reaction,” it said in a statement.

French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, speaking in a radio interview, said the Russian chef was suspected of planning “destabilisation”, which could take the form of disinformation or other types of attack.

Newspaper Le Monde, citing several European intelligence agencies, said authorities had found an identity card on the Russian man that suggested he worked for a unit under the command of Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB).

Relations between France and Russia have been deteriorating for months as President Emmanuel Macron is a prominent critic of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and a strong supporter of the Kyiv government.

French authorities have repeatedly flagged suspected Russian disinformation campaigns, while Russia has arrested a French researcher in the country on espionage charges.

The Olympics kick off on Friday with a spectacular but logistically fraught opening ceremony along the River Seine.

“It’s not just the safety of people in the streets, it’s the safety of the systems,” said Australian Olympic Committee president Ian Chesterman, who has been voted to join the IOC from 2025.

“Enormous resources are going into trying to deal with those threats, and let’s hope they’re successful.”

France has rolled out its biggest ever security operation to safeguard the Games, which take place against a backdrop of wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

Last month, French police arrested a 26-year-old Ukranian-Russian man after he blew himself up with explosive materials in a hotel room north of Paris.

He was being investigated by France’s domestic spy agency on suspicion of participation in a terrorist conspiracy and bomb plot.

Also in June, Russia arrested French researcher Laurent Vinatier for allegedly failing to register as a foreign agent while gathering information on the Russian military.

He is part of a growing list of foreign nationals detained in Russia who have found themselves caught up in the crisis in relations between Russia and the West during the Ukraine war.

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