A most unusual man
The curious case of self-taught Russian geologist and archaeologist Andrey Veryanov sentenced to 24 years for treason

At the end of May, Russia’s latest treason trial reached its conclusion. This time, the person being convicted behind closed doors was Andrey Veryanov, a 55-year-old self-taught scientist and archaeologist who has spent much of his adult life in Peru. Nothing about Veryanov is ordinary: not his case, not his backstory, and certainly not his 24-year sentence to be served in a maximum-security penal colony.
Veryanov had been staunchly anti-Soviet, making friends with foreigners and trading their valuable currency and fashionable clothes, both of which were in short supply in the USSR.
The brutality of the siege shocked the country, and, for Veryanov, served as proof that Russia was no longer a safe place for his family.
At one point, he apparently even told friends that he intended to give up his Russian passport and would apply for Ukrainian citizenship at the embassy in Lima.
He began to abuse alcohol and cocaine, spending seven months in rehab before attempting to make a dramatic escape by jumping from a third-floor window.
It struck Veryanov that in Russia he was in the thick of things and could perhaps make a difference.
“When Putin started the war, I tried to resist, looking for like-minded people. I hope that this nightmare will soon be over and we will all be free.”
Veryanov will be almost 80 when he gets out of prison if he serves his entire term.


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