Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Hvaldimir

Hvaldimir
Hvaldimir spyhopping to inspect a boat at Hammerfest Harbour
SpeciesBeluga whale
SexMale
Bornc. 2009 (2009)
Died31 August 2024(2024-08-31) (aged 14–15)
Risavika, Rogaland, Norway
Cause of deathTBD
Known forSuspected Russian spy
Named afterVladimir Putin

Hvaldimir (Norwegian pronunciation: [/ˈʋɑːl.dɪ.mɪr/]; c. 2009[1][2] – 31 August 2024) was a male[3] beluga whale that fishermen near Hammerfest in northern Norway noticed in April 2019 allegedly wearing a camera harness. After being freed from the harness, the whale remained in the area and appeared used to humans. Speculation that he had been trained by Russia as a spy whale led to his being dubbed Hvaldimir, a portmanteau of Norwegian hval (whale) and "Vladimir", for Russian President Vladimir Putin. As of 2023, Hvaldimir's range appeared to have expanded to include areas of the south-western coastline of Sweden. On 31 August 2024, Hvaldimir was found dead in the bay of Risavika, close to Stavanger in Norway. Activist groups claimed he died from gunfire, but the following necropsy confirmed that was not the case.[4]

According to Ukrainian marine researcher Olga Shpak, the whale was named Andruha and was captured in the Sea of Okhotsk in 2013. The whale spent a year in St. Petersburg and then was moved to a Russian military naval base in Murmansk where it eventually escaped.[5]

  1. ^ Solheim, Eric Kjerstad (2 September 2024). "– Det kom som et sjokk på oss alle". Verdens Gang. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  2. ^ Hegnar, Emma Victoria (30 May 2023). "Full fart: - Vet ikke hvorfor". Dagbladet. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  3. ^ Hanne Bernhardsen Nordvåg, "Hva kan du om Hvaldimir?" [What do you know about Hvaldimir?], NRK Finnmark, 31 August 2019 (in Norwegian): "Hvaldimir svømte på rygg med flagget til topps." [Hvaldimir was swimming on his back with his flag flying.]
  4. ^ Norheim, Håkon Jonassen (9 September 2024). "Politiet mistenker ikke at Hvaldimir er skutt". NRK (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 9 September 2024.
  5. ^ Gregory, Andy (13 November 2024). "Mysterious Russian 'spy whale' may have fled military training, marine expert says". The Independent.

Previous Page Next Page






Hvaldimir German Hvaldimir Finnish Hvaldimir French Hvaldimir IO 흐발디미르 Korean Hvaldimir NB Хвалдимир Russian Hvaldimir Swedish 哈瓦爾基米爾 Chinese

Responsive image

Responsive image