US envoy to Russia meets jailed reporter Gershkovich

Evan Gershkovich
Evan Gershkovich has denied trying to obtain military secrets while on a trip to Yekaterinburg. -AP

US ambassador to Russia Lynne Tracy has been granted access to jailed Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, the US State Department says, in the second such visit since his pre-trial detention in March on espionage charges he denies.

Tracy met with Gershkovich at Lefortovo Prison in Moscow in what was the first time US embassy officials were granted consular access since April 17, a State Department representative said.

"Ambassador Tracy reports that Mr Gershkovich is in good health and remains strong, despite his circumstances," the State Department said. 

"We expect Russian authorities to provide continued consular access."

A Russian judge on June 22 rejected an application for Gershkovich, 31, to be released from prison while awaiting trial. 

Tracy after that decision accused Russia of conducting "hostage diplomacy".

Russia has said Gershkovich was caught trying to obtain military secrets while on a trip to the Russian city of Yekaterinburg but has provided no details supporting that assertion.

The Wall Street Journal denies the allegations.

The State Department repeated the US view that Gershkovich is wrongfully detained and it described the charges against him as baseless.

It called for the immediate release of Gershkovich and Paul Whelan, a former US Marine serving a 16-year sentence in a Russian penal colony on espionage charges.

The State Department also described Whelan, who was detained in Moscow in 2018, as "wrongfully detained".

Tracy's meeting with Gershkovich was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

US-Russian relations are at their lowest point in more than six decades following Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Russia has agreed in the past to high-profile prisoner exchanges with the United States, most recently last year when basketball star Brittney Griner, sentenced in Russia on a drug charge, was exchanged for Viktor Bout, a Russian arms trafficker convicted in the United States.

Russia has said there could be no exchange in Gershkovich's case until a verdict is reached in his case. 

No date has so far been announced for his trial.