Tag: Russia

  • Russian schoolboy gets 6 years in prison for arson

    Russian schoolboy gets 6 years in prison for arson

    A 17-year-old schoolboy in Russia was sentenced to six-years in a prison camp on Thursday for attempted arson attacks against military facilities.

    The court in Saint Petersburg found him guilty of “attempted terrorism’ for throwing Molotov cocktails at the buildings of two district defense offices a few months ago in protest against Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    The harsh approach of the judiciary had previously caused a stir because the then 16-year-old teenager had hardly caused any damage; neither did the attempted attack lead to a fire.

    The “Meduza’’ portal also reported, citing the pupil’s mother, that he was suffering from chronic liver disease.

    Russian courts often sentence opponents of the war to lengthy prison sentences. Internationally, most of them were considered political prisoners.

  • Russia says Israel nuclear remark raises ‘huge number of questions’

    Russia says Israel nuclear remark raises ‘huge number of questions’

    Russia’s foreign ministry on Tuesday said a remark by an Israeli junior minister who appeared to express openness to the idea of Israel carrying out a nuclear strike on Gaza had raised a huge number of questions.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday suspended Heritage Minister Amihay Eliyahu, from a far-right party in the coalition government, from cabinet meetings “until further notice”.

    Asked in a radio interview about a hypothetical nuclear option, Eliyahu had replied: “That’s one way.”

    Maria Zakharova, Russia’s foreign ministry spokeswoman, was quoted as saying by state RIA news agency.”this has raised a huge number of questions.”

    Zakharova said the main issue was that Israel appeared to have admitted that it had nuclear weapons.

    Israel does not publicly acknowledge it has nuclear weapons though the Federation of American Scientists estimates Israel has about 90 nuclear warheads.

    “Question number one, it turns out that we are hearing official statements about the presence of nuclear weapons?”

    “If so, then where are the International Atomic Energy Agency and international nuclear inspectors?” she said.

    Eliyahu remark drew condemnation from around the Arab world, scandalised mainstream Israeli broadcasters, was deemed “objectionable” by a U.S. official, and Iran called for a swift international response.

    “The UN Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency must take immediate and uninterrupted action to disarm this barbaric and apartheid regime. Tomorrow is late,” Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian said on platform X on Monday.

  • Russia’s Lavrov optimistic of Israel-Palestine negotiations

    Russia’s Lavrov optimistic of Israel-Palestine negotiations

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov expressed hope that Israel and Palestine will start negotiations and take into account the UN Security Council’s decisions.

    “I hope everyone (Israel and Palestine) will come to reason and join the negotiating table,” the foreign minister said in an interview for a TV show at the Rossiya-1 broadcaster aired on Friday.

    The minister added that it will be necessary for authorities of Israel and Palestine “to look on the map and coordinate all their actions with the UN Security Council’s decision and take into account the realities on the ground after 1967.”

    On Friday, the Russian Foreign Ministry said it was working on the evacuation of Russian citizens from the conflict zone.

    The ministry also said that more than 1,000 people had applied for help, including the citizens of former Soviet countries and their family members.

    Russia maintains “active contacts with the key regional actors in order to open humanitarian corridors, essential for evacuation and delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexey Zaitsev said.

    The work on defining the Russian citizens who want to leave the conflict zone is being conducted as not everyone wants to leave or tries to approach the Russian diplomatic services, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said later on Friday.

  • Gaza ground offensive: Russia sends strong warning to Israel

    Gaza ground offensive: Russia sends strong warning to Israel

    Russia has warned Israel against a ground offensive against the Islamist group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, in comments were reported by Russian state media, said on Tuesday that there was a threat of an expansion of the conflict in the Middle East.

    The threat would be terrible consequences for the entire region and with a greater humanitarian catastrophe.

    Peskov was speaking in Beijing, where President Vladimir Putin is making a two-day visit.

    The Kremlin says that Putin intends to discuss the situation in the Middle East with China’s party and state leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Belt and Road Forum.

    Putin himself spoke on the phone with several leaders in the Middle East on Monday, including Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

    The Kremlin chief, who was waging a destructive war against Ukraine, called for a ceasefire to protect civilians.

    Peskov once again confirmed that Abbas is expected to visit Moscow, though no date has been set.

    Russia advocated the creation of an independent Palestinian state while supporting security guarantees for Israel.

    The people of Israel must live in peace; Peskov stressed, but said the most important task now is to end the war in the Middle East.

  • UEFA scraps plan to re-instate Russian football teams

    UEFA scraps plan to re-instate Russian football teams

    European football’s governing body UEFA said Tuesday it had abandoned plans to re-admit Russian under-17 teams into the youth European Championship next year.

    “No technical solution to allow Russian teams to play could be found,” UEFA said.

    In September, UEFA reinstated Russian youth teams to its competitions, having suspended the country’s senior sides due to the ongoing war in Ukraine.

    Many football federations were angered by this decision, including the Ukrainian football federation, which was joined by at least 11 other federations out of the 55 UEFA members, stating they would boycott all competitions involving a Russian team.

    The reversal decision was made at a meeting Tuesday that was attended by UEFA Senior Vice President Karl-Erik Nilsson, who lost his job as the head of the Sweden sports confederation days ago for backing UEFA’s pro-Russian move. Nilsson faced pressure from his home federation, which opposed the inclusion of Russian teams.

    UEFA has awarded hosting rights to its 2028 European championship to the United Kingdom and Ireland, both of which had their football federations threaten boycotts of games against Russian sides.

    Aleksandr Dyukov, the Russian delegate on the UEFA executive committee, did not attend the meeting. The Russian football union has made no immediate comments.

    On Tuesday, Kyiv thanked UEFA for scrapping the plans.

  • Russian attack destroys Kharkiv flats, killing 10-year-old

    Russian attack destroys Kharkiv flats, killing 10-year-old

    Russia has launched massive drone strikes and artillery fire on Friday in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, killing a 10-year old, a day after an attack on the same region killed more than 50 people.

    Russian forces shelled an apartment building in the eastern city of Kharkiv, where the child was pulled from the building’s rubble, said military reports from Kiev.

    Initial reports said 16 people were injured, including an 11-month-old baby.

    A video showed heavy destruction on the street in a residential area.

    A rocket hit the street, initial reports said.

    On Thursday, missiles fired onto a cafe and a store in Kharkiv killed at least 51 civilians, including a six-year-old girl.

    The Ukrainian air force reported on Friday morning that the country’s air defence had destroyed 25 of 33 Russian drones.

    Once again, the south of Ukraine, including the Odessa region, was affected by the attacks.

    In the Danube region a grain store was damaged and several trucks caught fire. There were no reported casualties.

    More than 110 towns and villages in Ukraine came under Russian artillery fire, the General Staff said, adding that several Russian attacks were repulsed.

    Ukrainian forces have been waging a counter-offensive for months to liberate their territories occupied by Russian troops in the east and south of the country.

    Ukraine has been defending itself against Russia’s war against it for more than 19 months with Western military aid.

  • Russia commits ‘genocide’ by abducting Ukrainian children – Zelensky laments

    Russia commits ‘genocide’ by abducting Ukrainian children – Zelensky laments

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine told world leaders in the UN General Assembly that  Russia was conducting mass kidnapping and deportation of Ukrainian children, making it a clear case of genocide.

    According to him, children were taught to hate Ukraine and all ties broken with their families.

    Speaking on food shortage, he said since the start of the war, Ukrainian ports in the Black and Azov seas were blocked by Russia and its ports on the Danube River targeted by drones and missiles.

    “It is a clear Russian attempt to weaponise the food shortage on the global market, in exchange for recognition of some, if not all, of the captured territories.”

    The impact of that weaponisation could be seen from Africa to South-East Asia, he said.

    “Nukes are not the scariest thing now. Mass destruction is gaining momentum. The aggressor is weaponizing many other things … things that are being used not only against our country but also yours as well,” he said,

    In addition, he said there were many conventions against weapons but none against weaponisation … of global food supplies and energy.”

    Zelenskyy further said that while Russia undermines the Black Sea Initiative, Ukraine continues to support it to ensure food security globally, having launched a temporary sea corridor from its ports and working to preserve land routes for grain exports.

    “When hatred is weaponised against one nation, it never stops there,” he said.

    The Ukrainian leader also said that he would present a Ukrainian peace formula at the Security Council on Wednesday to serve as a framework to end aggression on terms set by the victimized country in an open manner.

    Urging unity among countries, Zelenskyy said that while Russia is “pushing the world to the final war”, Ukraine is doing everything to ensure that after this Russian aggression, “no one in the world will dare to attack any nation.”

    “Every nation must be restrained, war crimes must be punished, deported people must come back home, and the occupier must return to their own land,” he said.

     

  • 2 killed in Kyiv as russia accuses Ukraine of biggest drone attack on its soil since fighting began

    2 killed in Kyiv as russia accuses Ukraine of biggest drone attack on its soil since fighting began

    Russia accused Ukraine of launching what appeared to be the biggest drone attack on Russian soil since Moscow invaded 18 months ago, followed by a Russian attack on Kyiv that Ukrainian officials said killed two people early Wednesday.

    Drones hit an airport in Russia’s western Pskov region near the border with Estonia and Latvia, and started a massive fire, the governor and local media reported. More drones were shot down over Oryol, Bryansk, Ryazan, Kaluga and the Moscow region surrounding the Russian capital, according to the Defense Ministry.

    Pskov regional Gov. Mikhail Vedernikov ordered all flights to and from the airport in the region’s namesake capital canceled Wednesday so the damage could be assessed during daylight.

    The airport strike, which was first reported minutes before midnight, damaged four Il-76 transport aircraft, Russia’s state news agency Tass reported, citing emergency officials.

    Footage and images posted on social media showed smoke billowing over the city of Pskov and a large blaze. Vedernikov said there were no casualties, and the fire has been contained. Unconfirmed media reports said between 10 and 20 drones could have attacked the airport.

    In Kyiv, falling debris killed two people and injured another after Russia launched a “massive combined attack” on the Ukrainian capital using drones and missiles, head of the military administration Sergei Popko wrote on Telegram.

    In what Popko said was the biggest attack since spring, Russia launched Shahed drones at Kyiv from various directions and then targeted the capital with missiles from Tu-95MS strategic aircraft. He said more than 20 targets had been brought down by Ukraine’s air defenses. It was unclear how many had been launched.

    The deaths and injury occurred when debris fell on a commercial building in the Shevchenkivskyi district, Popko said.

    Explosions in Ukraine were also reported in the southern city of Odesa and the Cherkasy region.

    In Russia, Pskov was the only region reporting substantial damage. In Kaluga, one drone was brought down and another hit an empty oil reservoir, causing a fire that was quickly extinguished, region Gov. Vladislav Shapsha reported. Residential windows were shattered, Shapsha said.

    Three drones were shot down over the Bryansk region, according to the Russian military, and some Russian media cited residents as saying they heard a loud explosion. Two drones were downed over the Oryol region, its Gov. Andrei Klychkov said. Two more were downed over the Ryazan region and one over the Moscow region, officials said.

    Outside Moscow, three main airports, Sheremetyevo, Vnukovo and Domodedovo, temporarily halted all incoming and outgoing flights, a measure that has become routine in the wake of the drone attacks.

    There was no immediate comment from Ukrainian officials, who usually refuse to take responsibility for any attacks on the Russian soil.

    Also early Wednesday, Russian-installed officials in the annexed Crimea reported repelling an attack of drones targeting the harbor of the port city of Sevastopol. Moscow-appointed governor of Sevastopol Mikhail Razvozzhayev said it wasn’t immediately clear how many of the drones have been destroyed. It wasn’t immediately clear if the attack caused any damage.

    Drone attacks on Crimea or Russian regions have become increasingly common in recent months, with Moscow being a frequent target, as well as regions that border with Ukraine, such as Bryansk. Fuel depots and air fields have been hit in drone attacks Russian officials blamed on Kyiv.

    The Oryol and Kaluga regions border with Bryansk, and the Moscow region sits on top of Kaluga. Pskov, however, is about 700 kilometers, 434 miles, north of Russia’s border with Ukraine, and has been described by Russian media and military bloggers on Wednesday morning as an unlikely target.

  • Putin won’t attend Prigozhin’s funeral – Kremlin

    Putin won’t attend Prigozhin’s funeral – Kremlin

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has no plans to attend the funeral of Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who was killed when his plane crashed last week, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.

    The crash came two months to the day after Prigozhin and his mercenaries staged a mutiny against Putin’s top military commanders in which they took control of the southern city of Rostov and advanced towards Moscow before turning back 200 km (125 miles) from the capital.

    “The presence of the president is not envisaged,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked if Putin would attend.

    Peskov said the Kremlin did not have any specific information about the funeral, and the arrangements were up to the family.

    Investigators said on Sunday that genetic tests had confirmed that Prigozhin was among the 10 people killed in the crash.

    The Kremlin has rejected as an “absolute lie” the suggestion by some Western politicians and commentators that Putin ordered Prigozhin to be killed in revenge.

  • Vladmir Putin speaks on ex-Wagner chief, Prigozhin’s death

    Vladmir Putin speaks on ex-Wagner chief, Prigozhin’s death

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has indirectly confirmed the death of the Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, the day after the crash of a jet which authorities said he was travelling in.

    In an apparent tribute to his former close confidante – whose fighters played a crucial combat role in Ukraine – Putin called Prigozhin a “talented man,” Russian news agencies reported.

    “He was a man of a complicated fate. He made some serious mistakes in his life, but he also achieved the needed results – both for himself and, when I asked him to, for the common cause,” Putin added.

    He was speaking at a meeting with the Russian head of the Donetsk administration, Denis Pushilin.

    The Russian government agency in charge of civil aviation, Rosaviatsiya, said Prigozhin, as well as top Wagner commander Dmitri Utkin, were among the 10 people on board the Embraer plane that crashed on Wednesday in the Tver Region, about 300 kilometres north-west of the Russian capital.

    It said there were no survivors.

    No cause was given for the deadly crash, but speculation was rife, in particular after Putin had vowed “inevitable punishment” against the mutiny leaders who he had accused of “treason.”

    It took nearly 24 hours for Putin to react publicly to the crash of the business jet.

    The Russian leader did not imply that Moscow had any part in the plane crash.

    He stressed instead that Prigozhin’s mercenary force had played a decisive role in the fighting in Ukraine, one which would not be forgotten.

    The Russian leader expressed his condolences to the relatives of the Kremlin loyalist-turned traitor and added that the crash was being investigated.

    Two months ago Prigozhin led a short-lived mutiny against the Russian military leadership, in what was the gravest challenge ever to Putin’s more than two-decade grip on power.

    Putin described the revolt as a “stab in the back and said that it could have caused the outbreak of “civil war.”

    The background to the day-long uprising – and the deal to end it – remain murky but Putin had vowed “inevitable punishment” against the mutiny leaders.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kiev had nothing to do with whatever fate befell Prigozhin

    “Everyone understands who is involved,” he told journalists, adding that the death of the mercenary leadership benefits Kiev “in a certain sense.”

    International leaders have also been cautious in commenting on the crash and the intense speculation around it.

    The U.S. believed Prigozhin was dead, Pentagon spokesman Pat Ryder told a press conference on Thursday.

    “Our initial assessment, based on a variety of factors, is that he was likely killed,” Ryder said.

    The U.S. Department of Defense currently had no information to suggest that a surface-to-air missile took down the plane, Ryder added.

    “We are continuing to assess the situation.”

    German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told Deutschlandfunk radio that the situation was still unclear.

    “No quick conclusions can be drawn,” she said.

    However, the incident underscored “that a system, that a power, that a dictatorship that is built on violence, will also only recognise violence internally,” she added.

    Asked about the future of the mercenary force, Baerbock said she feared “Russia will continue with its cynical game, with or without Wagner, not only in Ukraine but above all in Africa.”

    The pro-Kremlin television station Tsargrad TV reported – citing its own sources – that Prigozhin’s body had been provisionally identified, but that DNA analyses were still pending.

    Grey Zone, a Telegram channel associated with the Wagner Group, said Prigozhin died and suggested – without evidence – that the plane was shot down.

    The Russian Telegram-based news channel SHOT reported, citing investigative circles, that the crash may have been triggered by a bomb in the area of the landing gear.

    There has been no official comment on Prigozhin from either the Wagner Group or senior Russian government officials.

    Prigozhin’s admirers have reacted with grief and anger.

    Flowers were piled high outside the Patriot café in St Petersburg, which many of the city’s residents associate with Prigozhin and Wagner, the daily Kommersant reported.

    Known as Putin’s “cook,” the 62-year-old rose to prominence in the city in the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse by setting up a number of different businesses and becoming known as a high-end restaurateur. Years later, the Wagner Group’s headquarters were established in St Petersburg.

    This year Prigozhin spent months blasting the Russian military leadership as corrupt and incompetent, directing insults and scorn at Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and armed forces chief of staff Valery Gerasimov in particular.

    He had complained of inadequate supplies of munitions for his fighters serving on the front lines of Putin’s war in Ukraine. Prigozhin also accused Shoigu of ordering a rocket strike on Wagner camps in Ukraine.

    After ordering Wagner troops to storm Moscow, Prigozhin then called for a retreat after negotiations with the Kremlin, in which Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko acted as mediator.

    As part of the deal reached to escape prosecution, Prigozhin and his Wagner fighters were offered sanctuary in Belarus. Lukashenko says many of them are now training Belarusian soldiers.

    The Kremlin will do little to counter the “image that this is an act of retaliation,” said political scientist Tatiana Stanovaya of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.

    “Prigozhin’s death should be a lesson for all potential emulators,” she wrote on Telegram.