‘Russian Spy’ Whale Was Shot Dead, Animal Rights Groups Say

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Police confirmed they had received a complaint and said they would look into the matter "to determine whether there are reasonable motives
to launch an investigation."The Veterinary Institute told AFP that "if something suspicious were to come up" under the autopsy, "police
would be informed."When Hvaldimir was found in 2019, Norwegian marine biologists removed a man-made harness with a mount suited for an
action camera and the words "Equipment St
Petersburg" printed in English on the plastic clasps.Norwegian officials said Hvaldimir might have escaped an enclosure and been trained by
"Russian spy."A third organization that had also tracked the whale's movements, Marine Mind, said it found Hvaldimir's dead body floating in
the water on Saturday at around 2:30 p.m."There was nothing to immediately reveal the cause of death," director Sebastian Strand told AFP
"We saw markings but it's too early to say what the cause of death was."He said that some of the markings were probably caused by marine
birds, but that there was no explanation for the others at this stage.One Whale and Marine Mind had been at odds over how to best protect
Hvaldimir.Citing the risk of a collision with ships, One Whale had called for him to be transferred to the Barents Sea off northern Norway,
a more natural habitat for belugas.But Marine Mind had opposed the idea, arguing that a transport could pose a danger to his life.With an
estimated age of 15 to 20, Hvaldimir was relatively young for a beluga whale, which typically live 30 to 35 years, according to the WWF.In
2019, the hypothesis of a "spy whale" was fueled by the strategic location of the Barents Sea, a hotbed of East-West rivalry during the Cold
War.Moscow's most powerful navy fleet is based in the Barents Sea, and Russia and the West continue to track the movements of each other's
submarines in the region.The region is also the gateway to the Northeast Passage, which shortens shipping routes considerably between the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.