Lithuanian National Radio and Television (LRT) reported on Sunday that Kaminskas, née Shebunova, had her residence permit revoked as the Lithuanian State Security Department said her presence in the country may pose a threat to national security, due to her links to Russia.

Russian investigative outlet The Insider reported in 2019 that Kaminskas, a former stewardess at the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations (MES), which was led by Shoigu for 21 years, allegedly has two children with the defense minister—a son, born in 2001, and a daughter, born in 2008.

The girl, a minor, has Lithuanian citizenship, LRT said, citing relevant documents. She reportedly obtained citizenship in 2019 after her mother’s marriage to Adolfas Kaminskas, a Lithuanian citizen and businessman, who recognized her as his daughter.

Kaminskas has two other children in her marriage with Adolfas Kaminskas.

LRT found that Kaminskas lost her Lithuanian residence permit this summer after she and her husband relocated to Russia. Kaminskas has had a temporary residence permit in Lithuania since 2017.

Adolfas Kaminskas received a Russian passport this spring and has therefore become a Russian citizen, according to Russia’s official register.

Kaminskas appealed the country’s Migration Department’s decision to revoke her Lithuanian residence permit at the end of August. A hearing in the case has yet to be scheduled.

Olga Lautman, a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), said it is “surreal” that Shoigu’s daughter has Lithuanian citizenship.

“Russia’s war criminal defense minister Shoigu’s daughter has Lithuanian citizenship,” she wrote on Twitter, sharing The Insider’s article. “Russia conducts endless operations against the West yet has no problem enjoying all the luxuries and protections via our institutions. This must stop.”

Kaminskas’ husband acquired a number of businesses in Lithuania worth almost 20 million euros ($19.5 million) around the time the pair got married, according to The Insider.

Shortly after Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded neighboring Ukraine on February 24, he then began selling his Lithuanian assets, the publication said. Kaminskas and her husband reportedly own multiple companies in Russia.

Shoigu has been hit with sanctions by the EU and the United States over Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine nearly eight months ago.

Newsweek reached out to Lithuania’s Migration Department under the Ministry of the Interior for comment.