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Passport Proof Contradicts Russian Embassy: Ghana Now Has Yaytseslav Trahov’s Real Name and Nationality

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The Ghanaian government has dealt a decisive blow to the identity mystery surrounding the Russian national at the centre of a viral intimate video scandal, publicly releasing his passport details and definitively confirming his name and nationality.

The revelation directly contradicts statements made by the Russian Ambassador just one day earlier.

On Wednesday, February 18, 2026, Minister for Communication, Digital Technology and Innovations, Samuel Nartey George, disclosed that authorities have the suspect’s Russian passport and have verified his true identity.

“We have his passport, which we will be sharing with the media, his Russian passport,” the Minister stated. “His first name is Vladislav and his last name is Liulkov. The passport with which he entered the country will be shared with the media so that his identity is made known.”

According to the document, the individual is identified as Vladislav Aleksandrovich Liulkov, a Russian Federation national born on September 19, 1989. The passport confirms his nationality unequivocally as Russian.

A Direct Contradiction

Tuesday’s announcement stands in stark contrast to the position conveyed by the Russian Ambassador to Ghana, Sergei Berdnikov, during his summons to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on February 17, 2026.

Following that closed-door meeting, the Ministry issued a press release stating that Ambassador Berdnikov “indicated that he is unable to confirm the Russian nationality of the individual at the centre of the intimate viral videos.”

The Ambassador further claimed that the name circulating in Ghanaian media—widely reported as Yaytseslav Trahov—”is not a known Russian name and rather represents an inappropriate or vulgar expression in the Russian language.”

The Ambassador had, however, acknowledged that “similar activities of the said individual in other countries had come to the attention of Russian authorities” and pledged that the Russian Embassy was “willing to share information on the matter to facilitate Ghana’s ongoing efforts.”

With Ghanaian authorities now holding a Russian passport bearing a clear name and nationality, the discrepancy raises urgent questions about the accuracy of the information previously provided by the Embassy, and whether Russian authorities were genuinely unable to identify their citizen or were reluctant to do so.

Beyond the Name: New Details About the Crimes

Minister George did not stop at revealing the suspect’s identity. He provided critical new information about the nature of the alleged crimes, revealing that the scope of violation is broader and more insidious than initially understood.

“Let us be clear, not all the women he has publicised were engaged in an intimate encounter with him,” the Minister stated.

According to investigations by cybersecurity experts, some of the encounters depicted online were brief, public interactions with no sexual component.

“Some of the cases that have come to us show that he barely met the women at malls, greeted them, and briefly engaged them,” Sam George explained. “Cybersecurity checks indicate that in some instances there is no video of him with those ladies beyond the mall encounters.”

Despite this, the Minister said the suspect allegedly portrayed the women online as though they had been involved in intimate acts with him.

“However, he splashed their images as though he had intimate encounters with all of these ladies. That is wrong, and such a person must be brought to face the full rigours of the law,” he asserted.

This revelation adds a layer of digital defamation to the case, suggesting that Liulkov may have intentionally misrepresented innocent women to inflate his content and increase its exploitative appeal.

A Plea for Empathy

The Minister also made a direct appeal to the public, urging compassion for the women whose images have been circulated, many of whom are entirely innocent of any intimate involvement with the suspect.

“That is why we are calling for empathy for these ladies. There are people who are genuinely innocent and have not had any intimacy with the said gentleman. But because he portrayed all of them as victims, it has been traumatising for many of them,” he said.

He revealed that the psychological impact on some victims has been severe, underscoring the human cost of a scandal that has, until now, been dominated by diplomatic and legal manoeuvring.

What Happens Now?

With the suspect’s identity now confirmed as Vladislav Aleksandrovich Liulkov, the path forward for Ghanaian authorities becomes clearer—even if the obstacles remain significant.

The government has stated its intention to pursue legal channels, including the possibility of extradition, to bring Liulkov to justice under Ghana’s Cybersecurity Act 2020. The Act carries penalties of up to 25 years for non-consensual sharing of intimate images.

However, the absence of a bilateral extradition treaty between Ghana and Russia, which was explicitly noted in the Ministry’s press release after the Ambassador’s summons, remains a formidable barrier. Any cooperation from Russia will be voluntary, and the diplomatic pressure on Moscow to act will now intensify, particularly given the discrepancy between the Ambassador’s statements and the evidence now in Ghana’s possession.

The case is being handled by relevant state institutions, including the Ghana Police Service, with cybersecurity experts continuing their investigations. For the women whose lives have been upended—both those who were violated and those who were merely portrayed as such—the confirmation of a name is a small but significant step toward accountability.

And for the suspect now identified as Vladislav Aleksandrovich Liulkov, the anonymity he may have sought behind a vulgar alias has been stripped away. The question that remains is whether the full force of the law can reach him.

Ghana News

Ghana Successfully Evacuates Former Vice President and Wife from Qatar

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Accra, Ghana – March 4, 2026 – Ghana’s former Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia and his wife Samira Bawumia have been safely evacuated from Qatar as the US–Israel–Iran conflict enters its most dangerous phase, diplomatic sources confirmed.

According to reporting by Joy News, relocation was coordinated by Ghanaian embassies in the region under direct instructions from Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa.

Officials described the operation as swift, discreet, and well-coordinated with host authorities, though specific details—including the destination country—remain undisclosed for security reasons.

The evacuation comes after Iranian missile and drone strikes targeted US military bases and civilian infrastructure across the Gulf, including Qatar, in retaliation for US–Israeli airstrikes that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The conflict has triggered widespread airspace closures, mass flight cancellations, and heightened risks for civilians and expatriates.

Ghana’s Foreign Ministry has activated emergency preparedness plans across the Middle East, with partial evacuation of non-essential embassy staff from Tehran already underway and full contingency measures in place for nationals in Iran, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and other affected countries.

The ministry continues to urge Ghanaians in the region to shelter in place, register with missions, avoid unnecessary movement, and monitor official channels.

The crisis threatens Ghana’s large diaspora in the Gulf—many of whom work in construction, hospitality, domestic services, and other sectors—whose remittances remain a vital source of foreign exchange.

It also risks driving up global oil and LNG prices, potentially reversing Ghana’s recent single-digit inflation gains and increasing fuel, transport, and living costs at home.

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Ghana News

Ghanaian Authorities Seize Over 1,000 Banned Chanfang Machines Used in Illegal Mining at the Port

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Accra, Ghana – March 3, 2026 – The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has intercepted 1,070 prohibited Chanfang mining machines at the Tema Port in one of the largest single seizures since the government intensified its fight against illegal small-scale mining, commonly known as galamsey.

The operation, executed on March 3, 2026, was the result of months of intelligence-led surveillance and multi-agency collaboration involving customs, security services, and regulatory bodies.

Officials say the machines were concealed in imported containers and destined for a sophisticated syndicate suspected of fueling widespread river and forest destruction across Ghana.

Chanfang machines—small, portable alluvial gold mining equipment—were banned nationwide in October 2025 due to their severe environmental impact. They cause extensive river pollution, heavy siltation, destruction of aquatic ecosystems, and degradation of fertile farmland.

The EPA cited the Environmental Protection Act, 2025 (Act 1124) and the Environmental Protection (Environmental Assessment) Regulations, 2025 (L.I. 2504) as the legal basis for the prohibition.

“Although the manufacture and sale of these machines may have created livelihoods for some individuals, their use in riverine mining has resulted in extensive environmental damage, including polluted water bodies, silted rivers, and the loss of aquatic biodiversity,” an EPA statement read.

The seized equipment is now under secure custody pending further investigations. Authorities have vowed to prosecute all individuals and companies linked to the shipment, signaling a broader strategy to target not only on-the-ground operators but also importers, financiers, and logistical facilitators sustaining the illegal mining ecosystem.

The interception aligns with the EPA’s ongoing efforts to restore degraded water bodies. The agency recently deployed ionic nano-copper technology to treat polluted sections of the Birim River in the Eastern Region, at an estimated cost of $200,000 per kilometre.

Illegal mining remains one of Ghana’s most pressing environmental and public health challenges, contaminating major rivers that supply drinking water to millions. The EPA reiterated its zero-tolerance stance and commitment to dismantling supply chains that enable the entry of banned equipment.

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Ghana News

Ghana Intensifies Middle East Evacuation Efforts as Gulf States Reel from Iranian Retaliatory Strikes

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Accra, Ghana – March 3, 2026 – Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa has disclosed that the government is actively preparing for potential large-scale evacuation of citizens from Iran and several Gulf countries following Iran’s missile and drone attacks on US military bases and civilian infrastructure across the region.

In a Facebook post late Tuesday evening, Minister Ablakwa revealed he convened a virtual emergency meeting with Ghana’s Heads of Mission in Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE, Iran, and Turkey to assess the fast-moving crisis and coordinate consular support. He reported that no Ghanaian has been killed or injured to date.

Key actions underway include:

Creation of a comprehensive database of all Ghanaians in the affected countries, including short-term visitors and transit passengers

Direct outreach to identify individuals wishing to be evacuated for urgent government consideration

– Active assistance for Ghanaians seeking to exit via strategic border crossings

“The safety and welfare of all Ghanaians remains our utmost priority,” the minister stated, closing with “For God and Country.”

The diplomatic push comes as Gulf Arab states—long positioned as neutral commercial and tourism hubs—find themselves directly targeted by Iran’s retaliation against US-Israeli airstrikes that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Strikes have hit energy facilities, airports, and residential areas in the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, shattering the region’s image of stability and prompting widespread airspace closures, flight suspensions, and economic disruption.

The conflict threatens Ghana’s large diaspora in the Gulf (construction workers, domestic staff, students, and businesspeople) whose remittances are vital to the economy.

It also risks driving up global oil and LNG prices, potentially reversing Ghana’s recent single-digit inflation gains and increasing fuel, transport, and living costs.

Ghana’s missions continue to advise nationals to shelter in place, avoid unnecessary movement, register immediately, and monitor official channels. Emergency contacts remain: +233 240 913 284 / +233 240 793 072.

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