A Scottish man who worked as a military instructor in Ukraine but was recruited to work as a Russian spy has been jailed in the country for eight-and-a-half years.

Ross David Cutmore, from Dunfermline in Fife, admitted disclosing "unauthorised information" on the deployment of Ukrainian forces and foreign military instructors.

Cutmore - who arrived in Ukraine in early 2024 - was also accused of discussing  terrorist attacks and illegally possessing a pistol supplied by the Russians.

He admitted his guilt at the Kyiv District Court in Odesa on 30 April under a plea deal and had co-operated with the investigation, according to the Ukrainian authorities.

Cutmore was arrested last year after an  investigation by the Ukrainian security service.

The probe found he had passed on the location coordinates of Ukrainian units, photographs of training areas and information about military personnel.

He also collected data on facilities in Odesa, discussed the possibility of using explosive devices and attempted to gain access to the command of military units.

For one of the tasks he is said to have received 6,000 US dollars (£4,400)

The Ukrainian security service said he initially travelled to Ukraine to work as an instructor in January 2024 but gave up this work in September and began looking for "easy money" in pro-Kremlin online communities.

He was then recruited by an officer from Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) who offered him cash in exchange for co-operation.

The Ukrainian authorities said Cutmore also received instructions from the FSB to prepare a series of terrorist attacks.

They said he was given instructions for making an improvised explosive device, as well as the coordinates of a weapons cache from which he took a Makarov pistol with two loaded magazines.

He was detained by the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) counterintelligence officers at the planning stage in October last year.

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The BBC's Russia editor reports from a Red Square with none of the military hardware which the Kremlin normally showcases to project power internationally.