Eynalova claims that Kotau borrowed €5,000 from her. While we cannot verify that the debt existed, we do possess evidence suggesting that he may have received funds shortly before traveling to Türkiye. About a week before his departure, on August 13, 2025, Kotau approached a UAE businessman he knew and asked for an unusual favor. He requested the details of an Emirati bank card, saying that a certain individual would make a cash deposit at an ATM in Dubai, after which the money should be transferred to him. We don’t know exactly who deposited the cash into the account. However, Eynalova cannot be excluded as a possible source of the funds. She had previously posted a social media review of the same bank branch where the money was deposited. On the eve of the trip, Kotau told friends that the costs of an important meeting in Türkiye would be covered by the hosts. [*]
What exactly connected Kotau and Eynalova remains unclear. We know that Kotau repeatedly tried to establish himself in business, although one of his partners claims that he ultimately lost all of his savings as a result. After a trip to Dubai in the summer of 2023, Kotau began telling acquaintances about his connections to influential figures in the UAE. He told one friend that he had been offered a position as an adviser to a prince. It was after that trip that we first identified contact between him and Eynalova. Although she speaks Russian, their correspondence was conducted in English. In one message, Eynalova informed Kotau that Azerbaijani magnate Anar Mammadov had taken an interest in his project.
During the same period, Kotau was discussing another potential venture with a Minsk-based IT entrepreneur. According to the businessman, he told Kotau about a group of Russians planning to channel gambling revenues into the UAE and Bahrain. Their correspondence continued at least through the end of 2024. It is also known that Kotau returned to Dubai in April 2025. After meeting with one acquaintance, he headed to another meeting but did not disclose whom he was going to see. It cannot be ruled out that the meeting was with one of the future passengers of the yacht Shells — the vessel on which he was later delivered into the custody of FSB officers.
One ship, two names, X owners
At the time of the operation, the yacht Shells was owned by the British company MGA Yachting Ltd. [*] Toygar Yedigöz, a Turkish citizen, was its beneficial owner until 2022. [*] At least in 2023, he was a member of the board of directors of Fix Defence Defense Industry Inc., [*] a Turkish company working in the military-industrial complex. It developed body armor and drones, much like the Belarusian company BTS Global.
We have found several more links between the vessel and a Turkish arms manufacturer. One of the captains of the yacht Shells listed Fix Defence as his employer on LinkedIn. The company and the yacht are both connected to the Heydarov couple. Emin was a member of the board of directors of Fix Defence. In 2022, his wife, Sabina, took over MGA Yachting. At the time of the operation, the yacht Shells was registered under this company. [*] Moreover, Emin Heydarov, an Azerbaijani, just like Qahira Eynalova, flew to Belarus several times. We managed to reach the businessman, but he refused to discuss the matter and showed no interest in Kotau’s disappearance. Sabina Heydarova ended the call immediately upon hearing our questions.
Six months after the events surrounding Anatol Kotau’s disappearance, the yacht was sold to a company registered in the Marshall Islands that does not disclose its beneficial owners. A source in the yacht brokerage circle told the BIC that the previous owner sold the vessel to a friend. We can make an educated guess as to who that friend was..
The vessel was renamed after the sale. The new name is YS Legacy. [*] In March 2026, the Belarusian company BTS Global filed an application to register a trademark with the same name. [*] The Latin letters YS in the yacht’s name and in the registered Belarusian brand match Yury Serykh’s initials as written in his passport. The link to Serykh can also be found in corporate documents. For example, Legacy Properties Ltd., which transferred ownership of one of its assets to him in February 2019, was registered in the Marshall Islands at the same address as the new owners of the yacht YS Legacy (formerly Shells). [*]
The investigation hasn’t even started
During the investigation, we determined that four individuals were involved in Anatol Kotau’s disappearance in some way: Yury Puzikau of Belarus, Yuriy Golovanov and Petr Grib of Russia, and Qahira Eynalova of Jordan. They helped organize the trip, during which the Belarusian politician was seized by FSB agents, and participated in it. However, in their official responses to inquiries, the Russian and Belarusian penitentiary and law enforcement authorities maintain that he has not been detained and is not being held in any place of detention.
We also contacted the subjects of this investigation, along with other individuals and companies mentioned in this article, for comment. Qahira Eynalova said she did not understand our questions and warned that she would pursue legal action if we continued to bother her. Yuriy Golovanov saw the journalist’s message on Telegram but did not reply. As of publication, no other responses had been received.
Most of the individuals involved in this investigation are linked, in one way or another, to an arms trade network controlled by Yury Serykh, a veteran of Belarus’s security service.
In September 2025, the Polish Prosecutor’s Office declined to open a criminal case over the deprivation of Kotau’s liberty. As far as we know, in the ten months since his disappearance, the Polish police and security services have taken no active investigative steps. They have not questioned any of his relatives or acquaintances. Investigators did not inspect his possessions or electronic devices at his home or workplace. The Polish National Prosecutor’s Office informed us that it is not conducting an investigation into Kotau’s disappearance. Yet there is a legal basis for doing so, lawyer Ales Michalevic told the BIC:
“Any issue arising from the fact that he is not a Polish citizen and disappeared in a third country is readily overcome by the fact that the crime related to his disappearance started in Poland, ... and that the offense is linked to torture. <...> We can reasonably assume that he was transported out of Türkiye under somewhat inhumane conditions,” said Ales Michalevic.
Anatol Kotau turns 46 on June 18, 2026, the day this investigation is published. People close to him and his friends still do not know whether he is alive and, if so, where he is.