The leaseholder of the MV Rhosus — the decrepit ship that carried more than 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate to the Beirut port, where it detonated in August 2020 killing at least 218 people — was detained earlier this month in Bulgaria, upon arrival from Cyprus.
Russian national Igor Grechushkin’s detention comes nearly five years after an investigating judge issued a warrant for his arrest.
OCCRP editor Aubrey Belford coordinated OCCRP's investigation into the blast from Kyiv, where he was based at the time, working with over 20 reporters around the world.
The story was truly global in nature — a Moldovan-flagged, Cypriot-owned, Panama-registered ship carrying Georgian ammonium nitrate to Mozambique, manned by a Russian captain, with a Russian and Ukrainian crew — and injected a contrast dye into the murky world of “obscure, offshore structures, shell companies, the loopholes, the dark places, international shipping,” Belford said.
“It is an incredibly complex and opaque world that facilitates corruption with really deadly consequences.”
Five years on from the blast, a long-stalled domestic probe is showing signs of life. This week, Lebanese Minister of Justice Adel Nassar told OCCRP’s Lebanese media partner Daraj that the investigation is “moving forward seriously and quickly.”
“With the explosion, that was this really dramatic manifestation of the systemic issues,” Belford said. “This story is not just something that helps explain what happened in Beirut, but also helps explain a lot of broader problems.”
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