The arrest has raised speculation that Russia may want a prisoner swap like the one last year in which Russia released US basketball star Brittney Griner, who had been arrested over traces of cannabis found in her possession.
A Wall Street Journal reporter, Evan Gershkovich has been arraigned at a Moscow court on Tuesday, in the first partly open hearing since his arrest for alleged espionage.
According to AFP, Gershkovich appeared wearing jeans and a blue checkered shirt, crossed his arms and smiled before the start of the appeal hearing against his pre-trial detention in a case that has drawn global backlash.
The United States ambassador to Moscow Lynne Tracy was also in the courtroom, but she was ushered out along with the press during the hearing itself.
AFP said the press will only be allowed back in to hear the decision at the end of the hearing.
No questions were allowed during the brief media appearance and Gershkovich did not speak from inside the glass defendant’s cage.
There is little chance he will be released ahead of his trial, which could be months away.
The WSJ reporter, a US-born son of Soviet Jewish emigres, was arrested last month by Russia’s FSB security service during a reporting trip in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg.
The FSB said the 31-year-old tried to obtain classified defence information for the US government, but the details of the case have been kept top secret.
He, however, has firmly rejected the charges, which carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
Gershkovich, who has also worked for AFP, is the first foreign journalist arrested on spying allegations since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Since his arrest on March 29, Gershkovich has appeared in court only once before — at a closed custody hearing on March 30.
He was remanded in custody until May 29 and is being held at the Lefortovo prison in Moscow, where many high-profile prisoners accused of treason and espionage have been held.
“He is in good health and remains strong,” US Ambassador Tracy was quoted by the US embassy as saying after visiting him on Monday.
In his first contact with the outside world, Gershkovich wrote a handwritten letter to his parents in Russian. “I am not losing hope,” it read.
His mother Ella Milman said he “felt it was his duty to report” from Russia.
“He loves Russian people,” she said in a video interview with the Wall Street Journal.
US President Joe Biden has called his imprisonment “totally illegal”.
More than three dozen news organisations have also signed a letter to the Russian ambassador in the United States, denouncing “unfounded espionage charges”.
“Gershkovich’s unwarranted and unjust arrest is a significant escalation in your government’s anti-press actions,” the letter released by the Committee to Protect Journalists said.
“Gershkovich is a journalist, not a spy, and should be released immediately and without conditions,” it added.
The arrest has raised speculation that Russia may want a prisoner swap like the one last year in which Russia released US basketball star Brittney Griner, who had been arrested over traces of cannabis found in her possession.
She was exchanged for Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer imprisoned in the United States.