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Pakistani Security Forces Killed In Bomb Attack Claimed By Tehrik-e Taliban

Residents of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province protest against a lack of security in the region in a June 15 demonstration that condemned both the government and extremists.
Residents of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province protest against a lack of security in the region in a June 15 demonstration that condemned both the government and extremists.

Pakistan's military said at least five soldiers in a troop convoy were killed by a roadside bomb in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province near the Afghan border in an attack claimed by the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a longtime ally of the Afghan Taliban. The attack comes after the group announced a unilateral cease-fire on the occasion of Eid al-Fitr holiday from June 17-19. The region has seen an increase in the number of deadly attacks in the past year attributed to the TTP. Relations between Afghanistan's Islamist rulers and Pakistan have been tense since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, with Islamabad blaming the Taliban for sheltering the TTP. Residents of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have protested against the lack of security provided by Islamabad and against the actions of extremists. To read the original story by Radio Mashaal, click here.

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Bulgarian President Won't Attend NATO Summit Due To Differences Over Ukraine

Bulgarian President Rumen Radev (file photo)
Bulgarian President Rumen Radev (file photo)

Bulgarian President Rumen Radev will not lead or participate in the country’s delegation to the NATO summit in July, his press service said on June 27. The press service said Radev's refusal is due to differences over the country's positions on the war in Ukraine. Radev “does not accept some provisions of the framework positions adopted by the Council of Ministers relating to commitments that our country undertakes regarding the war in Ukraine," Radev's press service said. The announcement came shortly after acting Prime Minister Dimitar Glavchev said that Radev should lead the Bulgarian delegation. The government's press center said earlier that both Radev and Glavchev would participate in the summit in Washington, but it was not clear who would lead the delegation. To read the original story on RFE/RL's Bulgarian Service, click here.

Lukashenka Announces Major Shake-Up Of Belarusian Government

Belarus's authoritarian leader, Alyaksandr Lukashenka (file photo)
Belarus's authoritarian leader, Alyaksandr Lukashenka (file photo)

Belarusian authoritarian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka reshuffled key positions in the government and presidential administration on June 27. Lukashenka was quoted by state news agency BelTA as saying "efficiency must be increased" and bureaucracy reduced. The new head of Lukashenka’s presidential administration is the former ambassador to Russia, Dmitry Krutoi. The position has been vacant since March. Lukashenka also replaced the first deputy head of the presidential administration, the foreign minister, the deputy prime minister, the minister for agriculture, and the minister of industry. All those appointed are under international sanctions. To read the original story on RFE/RL's Belarus Service, click here.

Zelenskiy Signs Security Pacts With EU, Estonia, Lithuania At Start Of Brussels Summit

European Council President Charles Michel (left), Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen take part in a signing ceremony in Brussels on June 27.
European Council President Charles Michel (left), Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen take part in a signing ceremony in Brussels on June 27.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on June 27 signed security agreements with the European Union, Estonia, and Lithuania at the start of a two-day EU summit in Brussels.

The security deal with the European Union reinforces the bloc’s support for Kyiv in nine areas of security and defense policy.

Live Briefing: Russia's Invasion Of Ukraine

RFE/RL's Live Briefing gives you all of the latest developments on Russia's full-scale invasion, Kyiv's counteroffensive, Western military aid, global reaction, and the plight of civilians. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war in Ukraine, click here.

A draft of the agreement obtained by RFE/RL reiterates the “resolute condemnation of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine” and reaffirms the EU’s “unwavering support for Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity,” Kyiv's right to self-defense against the Russian aggression, and its pursuit of a just peace.

The draft says that the EU supports Ukraine’s reforms and EU accession path, noting that overall EU assistance to Ukraine amounts to almost 100 billion euros ($107 billion), including 35 billion euros in military support.

“The European Union is determined to continue providing Ukraine and its people all the necessary political, financial, economic, humanitarian, military, and diplomatic support for as long as it takes and as intensely as needed,” the document says.

The draft stresses that "Russia must not prevail" in its full-scale war launched in February 2022 and says Ukraine must get back territory annexed by Moscow. It also lists commitments to providing military equipment, military training, and cooperation between the European and the Ukrainian defense industries.

The agreements Zelenskiy signed with Lithuania and Estonia while at the EU summit are intended to complement other similar agreements sealed between Ukraine and its allies. They are not mutual defense pacts but do amount to pledges to provide Ukraine with weapons and other aid and deter any future invasion.

The signing ceremony opened a meeting of the European Council attended by the leaders of the 27 EU countries who are in Brussels for their first formal meeting since European elections on June 6-9.

Apart from the defense matters, the summit is poised to approve Ursula von der Leyen, Antonio Costa, and Kaja Kallas in leadership roles. Von der Leyen is expected to be confirmed for another five-year term as president of the European Commission; Costa is expected to become president of the European Council; and Kallas, who is currently Estonia’s prime minister, is expected to become the EU’s foreign policy chief.

With reporting by Reuters

Kazakhstan Says It Will Not Extradite Suspect In Shooting Of Opposition Activist In Kyiv

On June 25, the Ukrainian Prosecutor-General's Office said it had started the extradition process for two Kazakh nationals suspected of the attempted assassination of Aidos Sadyqov.
On June 25, the Ukrainian Prosecutor-General's Office said it had started the extradition process for two Kazakh nationals suspected of the attempted assassination of Aidos Sadyqov.

ASTANA -- The chairman of Kazakhstan's parliament, Maulen Ashimbaev, said his country will not extradite to Ukraine Altai Zhaqanbaev, one of two Kazakh citizens suspected of the attempted murder of Kazakh opposition activist and journalist Aidos Sadyqov in Kyiv.

"According to our country's laws, our republic gives a priority to our citizens' rights.... Kazakhstan does not extradite its citizens to other countries," Ashimbaev said on June 27, adding that Kazakh investigators are ready to cooperate with Ukrainian officials to investigate the attack on Sadyqov.

Sadyqov, an outspoken critic of Kazakh President Qasym-Zhomart Toqaev and his government, was shot on June 18 while he was in his car in the Ukrainian capital and is currently in intensive care.

His wife, Natalya Sadyqova, who is also a journalist, was in the vehicle during the attack but was unharmed.

On June 26, Kazakh Deputy Interior Minister Marat Qozhaev told RFE/RL that if Ukraine requests the extradition of the two suspects from Kazakhstan, "everything will proceed in accordance with the law."

Earlier on June 25, the Ukrainian Prosecutor-General's Office said it had started the extradition process for two Kazakh nationals suspected of the attempted assassination of Sadyqov.

On June 19, just one day after the attack, Ukrainian police said investigators established that Sadyqov had been shot by two Kazakh suspects -- Altai Zhaqanbaev, born in 1988, and Meiram Qarataev, born in 1991 -- who were added to an international wanted list.

On June 22, Kazakhstan's Prosecutor-General's Office said the Central Asian nation's police had detained Zhaqanbaev and that they were trying to establish the whereabouts of Qarataev.

Natalya Sadyqova has said that Qarataev worked as a police officer in the northern Qostanai region. The Kazakh Interior Ministry, however, claimed that Qarataev had been sacked from the police force in 2019.

The Sadyqovs, along with their children, moved to Kyiv in 2014 after Kazakh authorities launched a case against Sadyqova, who worked as a journalist for the independent Respublika newspaper at the time. She was accused of slander.

Natalya Sadyqova said the attempted assassination against her husband appeared to be a "professional" operation.

On June 19, Sadyqova told RFE/RL that, hours before the attack, she and her husband had issued a new video titled Toqaev Is Putin's Puppet on their YouTube channel.

The video criticizes Toqaev's "pro-Russian politics" and looks at the activities of Russian oligarchs and agents of influence in Kazakhstan, some of whom obtained Kazakh citizenship after Russia launched its ongoing invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

She added that Toqaev would have stood to gain from her husband's killing but did not present any evidence that connected the president in any way to the shooting.

Toqaev's spokesman, Berik Uali, said on June 21 that the Kazakh president "had ordered law enforcement entities to find the two suspects' whereabouts and undertake corresponding measures."

"Kazakhstan's side is ready to cooperate with Ukraine's law enforcement structures, including via Interpol," Uali said.

Sadyqov used to lead a branch of the opposition Azat Social Democratic Party in his native Aqtobe region in Kazakhstan's northwest until 2010.

He later headed a group that was a major force for establishing a union to defend the rights of Kazakh workers at the Chinese-owned CNPC-Aktobemunaygaz oil company.

Montenegro Investigates Former Top Prosecutor Over Alleged Links To War Crimes

Former Montenegrin special prosecutor Milivoje Katnic is taken into custody.
Former Montenegrin special prosecutor Milivoje Katnic is taken into custody.

Montenegrin authorities announced on June 27 an investigation into the country's ex-special prosecutor over his alleged links to war crimes committed during the breakup of the former Yugoslavia. Milivoje Katnic was arrested earlier this year. According to a statement from the Special State Prosecutor's Office, Katnic is “accused of inhumane treatment of certain civilians of Croatian nationality, including attacking, torturing, and physically injuring them.” Katnic is also suspected of lifting entry bans for members of a Serbian criminal gang. Officials in Montenegro have pledged to tackle corruption and organized crime as part of the country's bid to join the European Union.

Former Russian Justice Official Gets Lengthy Prison Term In Absentia Over Anti-War Stance

The building of the Russian Justice Ministry in Moscow (file photo)
The building of the Russian Justice Ministry in Moscow (file photo)

A military court in Russia on June 27 sentenced a former Justice Ministry official who openly condemned Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine to 14 years in prison in absentia. The court also ordered Maria Mamedova to pay a fine of 600,000 rubles ($6,850). She was found guilty of "facilitating terrorism." It is not clear what the charge stemmed from. Russian officials earlier issued arrest warrants for Mamedova and her husband, Denis Mamedov, on charges of distributing false information about the Russian military. Mamedov was later sentenced to 8 1/2 years in prison in absentia. The couple currently resides in the United States. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Russian Satellite Breaks Up In Space, Forces ISS Astronauts To Shelter

The International Space Station
The International Space Station

A Russian satellite has broken up into more than 100 pieces of debris in orbit, forcing astronauts on the International Space Station to take shelter, U.S. space agencies said. There were no immediate details on what caused the breakup on June 26 of the RESURS-P1 Russian Earth observation satellite, which was decommissioned in 2022. U.S. Space Command said on June 27 that there was no immediate threat as it tracked the debris swarm. It occurred in an orbit near the space station, prompting U.S. astronauts on board to shelter in their spacecraft for roughly an hour, NASA's Space Station office said.

Jailed Russian Journalist Added To Terrorist List Over Links To Navalny's Team

Artyom Kriger (file photo)
Artyom Kriger (file photo)

Russian authorities on June 27 added Artyom Kriger, a journalist with the independent SotaVision Telegram channel, to the list of terrorists and extremists. The 23-year-old was arrested last week for cooperation with the team of late opposition leader Aleksei Navalny, which was labeled extremist and banned in Russia in 2021. Kriger is known for interviews with Russian politicians. In May 2023, his uncle, Mikhail Kriger, was sentenced to seven years in prison on a charge of justifying terrorism, which he and his supporters reject as politically motivated. To read the original story by Current Time, click here.

Russian Warrant Issued For Journalist Kurbangaleyeva

Farida Kurbangaleyeva (file phot0)
Farida Kurbangaleyeva (file phot0)

A Moscow court on June 27 issued an arrest warrant for journalist Farida Kurbangaleyeva on charges of justifying terrorism and the distribution of false information about Russia's military. Last week, Russian authorities added Kurbangaleyeva to their wanted list and the registry of terrorists and extremists. Kurbangaleyeva lives in Prague. Through the years, Kurbangaleyeva worked at various leading television channels in Russia and Current Time, the Russian-language TV and digital network run by RFE/RL, in Prague. She has a YouTube channel where she often interviews Ukrainian and Russian politicians and political observers. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service, click here.

Media Watchdogs Call On Biden To Recognize RFE/RL's Kurmasheva As 'Wrongfully Detained'

Journalist Alsu Kurmasheva appears in court in Kazan on May 31.
Journalist Alsu Kurmasheva appears in court in Kazan on May 31.

The U.S. National Press Club -- a professional association of American journalists -- and 18 other media freedom groups have called on President Joe Biden in a public letter to press for the recognition of RFE/RL journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, who has been held in a Russian prison since last year, as a "wrongfully detained" person.

Kurmasheva, a Prague-based journalist who holds dual U.S. and Russian citizenships, was taken into custody on October 18, 2023, on a charge of violating the so-called "foreign agent" law and distributing false information about Russia's military, a charge that could lead to a 10-year prison sentence.

She, her employer, and her supporters reject the charges as politically motivated.

The U.S. government and Biden himself have called for her immediate release, saying the charges are punishment for Kurmasheva's work as a journalist for RFE/RL.

However, the U.S. State Department has so far failed to designate her as a "wrongfully detained" person, a move that would raise the profile of the case against Kurmasheva, effectively labeling it as politically motivated.

A statement issued by National Press Club President Emily Wilkins that accompanied the letter said two previous appeals to Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken regarding the need to prioritize cases of detained American media workers remained unanswered.

"We have a section of the State Department designed for cases like Alsu’s -- the Office of the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs," the signatories of the letter said, adding that for her case to be transferred there, she needs to be declared wrongfully detained.

"She meets all the criteria. This should happen immediately. It should have happened months ago," the letter said.

"We have listened to the State Department twist itself into a pretzel explaining how there are other factors to be considered besides the criteria, but we have yet to hear a clear reason why State cannot declare her wrongfully detained," it continued.

Kurmasheva, who has worked for RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service for some 25 years, left the Czech capital in mid-May 2023 because of a family emergency in her native Tatarstan.

She was briefly detained while waiting for her return flight on June 2, 2023, at the Kazan airport, where both of her passports and phone were confiscated.

After five months waiting for a decision in her case, Kurmasheva was fined 10,000 rubles ($112) for failing to register her U.S. passport with Russian authorities.

Unable to leave Russia without her travel documents, Kurmasheva was detained again in October and this time charged with failure to register as a "foreign agent." Two months later, she was charged with spreading falsehoods about the Russian military.

On June 18, Judge Rizvan Yusupov upheld last month's decision by a district court in Tatarstan's capital, Kazan, to extend her pretrial detention until at least August 5.

During the last hearing on May 31, Kurmasheva said that her health had deteriorated and that she needed surgery.

"It has taken Alsu's government far too long to step forward and say that her detention is wrongful," the letter said, calling on Biden to step in.

"Your State Department must declare Alsu wrongly detained now," it said.

Among the signatories of the letter are media watchdogs and professional organizations such as Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Freedom of the Press Foundation, Women Press Freedom, and the Coalition For Women in Journalism.

Two other Americans held in Russian custody, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan, have both have been designated as "wrongfully detained" by the State Department.

Gershkovich went on trial on June 26 in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg following his arrest in March 2023 on espionage charges that he, his employer, and the U.S. authorities have vehemently rejected as politically motivated.

Russian Official Says 10,000 Migrant Workers Sent To Fight In Ukraine

Aleksandr Bastrykin (file photo)
Aleksandr Bastrykin (file photo)

The chief of Russia's Investigative Committee, Aleksandr Bastrykin, said on June 27 that about 10,000 migrant workers with Russian passports have been sent to the Kremlin's war in Ukraine. Bastrykin called the move "a good feature that led to the situation when migrants started slowly leaving Russia." Bastrykin added that his committee had "caught" more than 30,000 migrants who obtained Russian citizenship but failed to register at military offices, a routine obligation for men in Russia. Central Asian governments have warned citizens working in Russia that they will face mercenary charges at home if they join the war in Ukraine to fight for either side. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Wildfires Hit 600,000 Hectares in Eastern Russia

According to Yakutia's Environment Ministry, work is under way to extinguish 92 forest fires in 16 districts, five of which have been localized.
According to Yakutia's Environment Ministry, work is under way to extinguish 92 forest fires in 16 districts, five of which have been localized.

Emergency officials in the Siberian region of Sakha-Yakutia said on June 27 that wildfires had spread to 600,000 hectares of land in the region, making it the largest territory in Russia hit by wildfires at the moment. In all, 170 sites in the region have been hit by wildfires since early May, destroying 2.5 million hectares of forest, which is 1 percent of all forest in Sakha-Yakutia. Since May, wildfire emergencies have been announced in other Siberian and Far East regions, such as Buryatia, Zabaikalye, and Khabarovsk. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Siberia.Realities, click here.

U.S. Commission On Religious Freedom Concerned Over New Tajik Law

Tajik women wear hijab while riding in a bus. (file photo)
Tajik women wear hijab while riding in a bus. (file photo)

The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has expressed concern over recently adopted amendments to Tajikistan's law on the regulation of traditions and ceremonies, saying it worsens religious freedom violations in the Central Asian state.

The amendments, signed by President Emomali Rahmon on June 20, among other restrictions bans children's games of "idgardak" during two major Islamic holidays -- Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha -- and forbids the sale, import, promotion, and wearing of clothes that are "foreign to national culture."

That provision is considered as targeting traditional Islamic head scarves for women, known as hijab.

Previously adopted regulations in the tightly controlled former Soviet republic have also imposed restrictions on circumcisions, baby-naming rituals, weddings, religious pilgrimage ceremonies, and funerals.

"The Tajik government, undeterred by the repeated CPC [country of particular concern] designations [by the U.S. government], continues to find new ways to further restrict religious freedom, as evident by its tightening of the already repressive 2007 traditions law," USCIRF Vice Chairman Eric Ueland said in the June 26 statement.

"While the State Department importantly designates Tajikistan as a CPC, naming and shaming is evidently not enough. The designation will only be effective if accompanied by actions, such as targeted sanctions or other consequences."

In an apparent attempt to target hijabs and other Islamic clothing, the Tajik government carried out a campaign to promote national dress in recent years.

In 2018, the government introduced a 376-page manual -- The Guidebook Of Recommended Outfits In Tajikistan -- which outlined what Tajik women should wear for different occasions.

The country has also unofficially banned bushy beards. Thousands of men in the past decade have reportedly been stopped by police and had their beards shaved off against their will.

"It is troubling to witness the recent onslaught of harassment against those who express their faith in ways that do not correspond with the state's preferred interpretation," USCIRF Commissioner Susie Gelman said.

"We urge the U.S. government to condition security assistance to the Tajik government on reform of the traditions law, the 2009 religion law, and all other legislation that criminalizes the peaceful expression of religion in the country," she added.

2 Dead, 1 Missing After Train Derails In Russia

Rescue team work to evacuate passengers from the Vorkuta-Novorossiisk train on June 26.
Rescue team work to evacuate passengers from the Vorkuta-Novorossiisk train on June 26.

Russian Railways said on June 27 that two people were killed and one remained missing after nine of 14 passenger cars of the Vorkuta-Novorossiisk train derailed a day earlier in Russia's Komi region. The Health Ministry said 40 people were injured, while the railway had said the number of injured was 46. The head of the Komi region, Vladimir Uiba, said 10 people were hospitalized, including a 14-year-old girl, whose state was described as "very serious." In all, 215 passengers and Russian Railways workers were aboard the train when the accident occurred. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Kyrgyz Parliament Approves Bill Obliging Judges To Speak Kyrgyz

Kyrgyz lawmakers on June 27 approved the second and third readings of a bill requiring all judges in the Central Asian country to speak Kyrgyz at no less than the B1 intermediate level. Those without that proficiency will not be eligible to serve as judges. In July 2023, Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov signed into law a bill that obliges all officials to be able to speak Kyrgyz for official purposes. Kyrgyz, a Turkic language, is Kyrgyzstan's state language, while Russian has the status of an official language. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Kyrgyz Service, click here.

Moldova Confirms Release Of Russian Journalist Detained In Separatist Transdniester

Timofei Ilyushin (courtesy photo)
Timofei Ilyushin (courtesy photo)

Chisinau has confirmed that Russian journalist Timofei Ilyushin has been released by the separatist authorities of Moldova's breakaway Transdniester region. Ilyushin, a reporter with the independent Russian online publication Sotavision (Sota), was released late on June 26, Moldova's Reintegration Bureau said on June 27. Sota reported that Ilyushin had been detained in Transdniester on June 24, while on assignment for an article. Ilyushin was declared an "undesirable" person in Russian-backed separatist Transdniester in March. In Russia, Sota was declared an "undesirable organization" in May, based on a 2015 law targeting NGOs that receive funding from foreign sources. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Moldovan Service, click here.

Hard-Liners Withdraw From Iran's Presidential Race To Concentrate Vote

Alireza Zakani (file photo)
Alireza Zakani (file photo)

Alireza Zakani, the hard-line mayor of Tehran, has said he is withdrawing from Iran’s presidential race -- the second to announce backing out of the June 28 election -- to help the conservative camp reach a consensus candidate.

Zakani made the announcement in a statement posted on social media on June 26, less than a day after Amirhossein Qazizadeh Hashemi, who served as a deputy to late President Ebrahim Raisi, dropped out of the race.

Iran is holding a presidential election on June 28 following the death of the ultraconservative Raisi in a helicopter crash last month. Elections in the Islamic republic are tightly controlled, with candidates being preselected by an unelected body dominated by hard-liners.

The six candidates cleared to run are all men, most are hard-liners, and some have ties to the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), the elite branch of Iran's armed forces.

"I want them [the main candidates] to look for unity and not to ignore the demands of the forces of the revolution and prevent the formation of a 'third Rouhani government" Zakani said in his post on X, referring to moderate former President Hassan Rouhani.

Hard-liners have accused the sole reformist hopeful Masud Pezeshkian of looking to continue the politics of Rouhani, who was strongly criticized by conservatives during his eight years in power.

Zakani also urged conservative parliament speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and hard-line former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili to "unite" in a bid to stop Pezeshkian from winning the June 28 election.

Why Iran's Presidential Election Matters More Than Past Votes
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Qazizadeh Hashemi announced late on June 26 that he too had withdrawn from the race in order to cement support around a single hard-line candidate.

The two were seen to be vying for the same voting bloc, which could help Pezeshkian, a heart surgeon and the sole reformist in the race.

Pezeshkian has the support of pro-reform parties and has been endorsed by moderates, including Rouhani and several members of his government.

The election was always thought to be a three-way race among Qalibaf, Jalili, and Pezeshkian. Several recent opinion polls in Iran show Pezeshkian pulling ahead of his conservative rivals. Pressure has been building on Qalibaf and Jalili to reach an agreement, with hard-liners warning that failing to settle on a consensus candidate could split the conservative vote.

U.S. Says 'Foul Play' Not Suspected In Death Of Kyiv Embassy Attache

The U.S. Embassy building in Kyiv
The U.S. Embassy building in Kyiv

The U.S. State Department said "foul play" was not suspected after an attache at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv was found dead in a hotel room in the capital. Reacting to Ukrainian media reports about the discovery of the body, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said late on June 26 that "it is our understanding that he died of natural causes, and there's no sign of foul play." The media outlet Strana UA, which first reported the discovery of the body, quoted a source at the embassy as saying the attache suffered from "high cholesterol."

Dead, Wounded In Russian Shelling, Air Strikes On Ukraine

Ukrainian soldiers fire a 2s7 self-propelled howitzer at Russian positions along the front line in the eastern Donetsk region earlier this week.
Ukrainian soldiers fire a 2s7 self-propelled howitzer at Russian positions along the front line in the eastern Donetsk region earlier this week.

Russia pounded Ukraine with air strikes early on June 27 and shelled civilian settlements in the frontline eastern region of Donetsk, killing at least one person and wounding 14, the military and regional officials said.

The death occurred during shelling of the industrial city of Toretsk, while those wounded were inhabitants of Memryk, Selidovo, and Komar, regional Governor Vadym Filashkin reported on Telegram.

Live Briefing: Russia's Invasion Of Ukraine

RFE/RL's Live Briefing gives you all of the latest developments on Russia's full-scale invasion, Kyiv's counteroffensive, Western military aid, global reaction, and the plight of civilians. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war in Ukraine, click here.

The Ukrainian military reported that Russia attacked Ukraine with six cruise missiles and 23 drones early on June 27.

Ukrainian air defenses shot down five of the missiles and all drones launched at targets in Ukraine, the military reported.

Serhiy Tyurin, the governor of the western region of Khmelnytskiy said on Telegram that nine incoming targets were shot down over the region, with no reports of casualties among civilians.

Six drones and three cruise missiles were downed over the southern region of Mykolayiv, Governor Vitaliy Kim reported, adding that there were no casualties.

Two drones were destroyed in the southern region of Kherson early on June 27, regional Governor Oleksandr Prokudin reported, adding that Russian shelling the previous day killed one civilian and wounded 16, including two children.

In the southern Dnipropetrovsk region, Russia launched a massive artillery attack on the city of Nikopol on the banks of Dnieper River, regional Governor Serhiy Lysak said on Telegram, adding that one drone was also shot down over his region.

Schools and kindergartens were damaged, Lysak said. He did not mention any casualties.

Meanwhile, Russia's Defense Ministry said that seven Ukrainian drones were shot down by its air defenses -- four over the Tver region, two over the Moscow region, and one over the Belgorod region.

Sota reported, based on eyewitness accounts, that a drone attack occurred on the Redkinsky Experimental Plant in the Tver region, where aviation fuel is produced. The plant has previously been attacked by drones.

Ukraine, whose energy infrastructure has been devastated by constant Russian attacks, has over the past several months increasingly been targeting fuel-production sites inside Russia, mainly oil-refining facilities.

Meeting Between Kosovo, Serbia Leaders Falls Through As EU Vows Normalization

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell (left) speaks with Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti prior to talks in Brussels on June 26.
European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell (left) speaks with Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti prior to talks in Brussels on June 26.

A scheduled meeting between the leaders of Serbia and Kosovo aimed at renewing of the process of talks on the normalization of relations between the two countries failed to take place in Brussels on June 26 amid continued signs of animosity on both sides.

Although it had been confirmed there would be a new round, Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti and Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic only met with their European counterparts.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, who was to host the Kurti-Vucic meeting, confirmed that "no progress in implementation of the agreement could be achieved."

These efforts will continue next week, Borrell said, when he will again try to host the two negotiators in Brussels.

Borrell said the EU would "continue putting all our efforts and capacity at the service of the normalization of relations between Kosovo and Serbia."

Vucic blamed Kurti for the talks failing to take place, saying his counterpart "didn't want to see me."

Kurti presented three conditions for further engagement in the broader normalization process, including the formalization of the Basic Agreement through the signatures of the respective heads of state and government and the handing over Milan Radoicic and his paramilitary-terrorist group to Kosovo’s judicial authorities.

Kurti said the conditions he presented were "guarantees of good faith and goodwill that would enable the implementation of the agreement."

Kosovo wants Serbia to turn over Radoicic, who is considered the mastermind of an attack in northern Kosovo on September 24, 2023, by armed ethnic Serbs on a Kosovo police patrol, killing one of the officers.

Borrell said Serbia was not ready to fully meet Kosovo’s conditions citing constitutional constraints, while Vucic indicated he was ready to explore options in formalizing the agreement in line with past dialogue practice.

“The parties’ positions remain far apart on how implementation of the agreement could be launched -- and consequently how the normalization process should continue. As I said before, the EU cannot alone want normalization of relations if the parties themselves cannot agree how to move forward,” said Borrell at the end of the meeting.

Serbia has never acknowledged Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of independence from Serbia. In the late 1990s a NATO intervention against Belgrade ended fighting between Kosovo and Serbia that claimed some 10,000 lives, mostly ethnic Albanians.

There were never high expectations for the June 26 meeting. The European Union wanted to organize the round to renew the talks that appear to many observers to be on life support. The last time leaders met was in September 2023.

Borrell said that despite coming changes in the EU leadership -- he is due to leave office in the autumn -- the obligations for Serbia and Kosovo remain the same.

“In a few months’ time, there will be different people, different names in our jobs, but the agreements, the council conclusions and the European Union’s expectations will not change. The member states will not change. The commitments and obligations of Kosovo and Serbia will not go away. Everyone will still be looking at the capacity and willingness of the Serbian president and Kosovo prime minister to deliver a better, European future for their people,” Borrell said ahead of the talks.

“Normalizing relations between Kosovo and Serbia is at the heart of the European Union’s engagement in the Western Balkans,” he added.

With reporting by AFP

Georgia Stuns Portugal To Qualify For Round Of 16 At Euro 2024

Georgian fans cheer on their team at the Euro 2024 soccer championship.
Georgian fans cheer on their team at the Euro 2024 soccer championship.

Georgia booked a place in the last 16 of Euro 2024 in their debut appearance at a major tournament with an early goal by Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Georges Mikautadze's penalty for a 2-0 win over Portugal on June 26. Kvaratskhelia gave Georgia a shock lead against a second-string Portugal team with just over a minute on the clock at the stadium in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. Mikautadze then ensured Georgia would claim the biggest soccer victory in the nation's history with a 57th-minute penalty. Portugal created several chances, but Georgia defended resolutely, countered at pace, and fully deserved their victory. The team finishes third in Group F and faces Spain in the last 16. Portugal had already qualified for the next round as group winners and will play Slovenia in the knockout round.

Russian Indicted In U.S. For Alleged Cyberattacks Against Ukraine Before War

The conspirators infected computers on the agencies’ networks with malware called WhisperGate, which was designed to look like ransomware but was actually designed to completely destroy the targeted computer and related data. (illustrative photo)
The conspirators infected computers on the agencies’ networks with malware called WhisperGate, which was designed to look like ransomware but was actually designed to completely destroy the targeted computer and related data. (illustrative photo)

A federal grand jury in the U.S. state of Maryland has returned an indictment charging a 22-year-old Russian citizen with conspiracy to hack into Ukrainian government computer systems and destroy them and their data.

The man named in the indictment, Amin Stigal, allegedly conspired with Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency and then launched cyberattacks against the Ukrainian government just before Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, the U.S. Justice Department said in a news release on June 26.

According to court documents, Stigal and members of the GRU conspired in January 2022 to use a U.S.-based company’s services to distribute malware to dozens of Ukrainian government entities’ computer systems and destroy them and related data stored on them in advance of the Russian invasion.

On January 13, 2022, Stigal and the GRU conspirators attacked multiple Ukrainian government agencies, the Justice Department's news release said. The list included the Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Ministry, the State Treasury, the Judiciary Administration, the Education and Science Ministry, and the Agriculture Ministry.

The conspirators infected computers on the agencies’ networks with malware called WhisperGate, which was designed to look like ransomware but was actually designed to completely destroy the targeted computer and related data.

The indictment says the cybercriminals compromised several of the targeted Ukrainian computer systems, lifted sensitive data and left this message at the websites: “Ukrainians! All information about you has become public, be afraid and expect the worst. This is for your past, present, and future.”

The conspirators offered the hacked data for sale on the Internet in an effort aimed at sowing fear among Ukrainians regarding the safety of government systems, the Justice Department said.

If convicted, Stigal, who remains at large, faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

To help catch Stigal and bring him to justice, the U.S. State Department has offered a $10 million reward for information on his whereabouts or about his malicious cyberactivity.

Ukraine Eliminated At Euro 2024 As Romania Advances

Ukrainian players pose with their flag before their match against Slovakia in Dusseldorf on June 21.
Ukrainian players pose with their flag before their match against Slovakia in Dusseldorf on June 21.

Ukraine was knocked out of the European Championship on June 26 following a 0-0 draw with Belgium in its Group E match. Romania won the group, followed by Belgium and Slovakia, and those three teams will advance to the round of 16. All four Group E teams finished with four points, but Ukraine lost its chance to advance on goal difference. Ukraine's brave run came to an agonizing end as it became the first team since the tournament increased to 24 teams not to progress with four points.

Updated

At Least 70 Injured In Train Derailment In Western Russia

According to TASS, the carriages derailed near the town of Inta. (illustrative photo)
According to TASS, the carriages derailed near the town of Inta. (illustrative photo)

At least 70 people were injured on June 26 when nine of 14 passenger train cars derailed in the Komi region of western Russia.

According to TASS, the carriages derailed after leaving the station in the town of Inta. The governor of the Komi region, Vladimir Uyba; the head of Inta's municipal district, Vladimir Kiselyov; and First Deputy Mayor Grigory Nikolayev went to the scene of the derailment, according to a Telegram post.

No deaths have been reported, but TASS said at least 70 of the 232 passengers were injured. RFE/RL's Russian Service estimates 150 of the passengers were traveling in the carriages that derailed.

A passenger who climbed out of one of the cars described the scene as a "nightmare" in a video on Telegram showing the derailed cars lying on their side.

Officials blame the derailment on a washed-out embankment. The same heavy rainfall that caused the embankment to erode has led to flooding and impassible roads which are hindering emergency services, according to the regional Health Ministry.

Two recovery trains were sent to the site of the derailment by Russian Railways, the company that owns the No. 511 Vorkuta-Novorossiysk. In addition, the ministry told TASS that doctors will fly to the derailment site in three helicopters within an hour.

Train traffic in the region has been suspended and the Transport Prosecutor's Office announced an investigation. Russian Railways has also launched an investigation under Russian Railways director Oleg Belozerov, according to a Telegram post.

In 2019, a criminal case investigated the derailment of 23 freight cars in Komi. TASS reported that the freight train derailed due to erosion caused by a pipe-culvert defect, and no injuries were reported.

Montenegro Has 'Broken The Ice' In EU Accession Talks, PM Says 

Montenegrin Prime Minister Milojko Spajic and Belgian Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib met in Brussels on June 26.
Montenegrin Prime Minister Milojko Spajic and Belgian Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib met in Brussels on June 26.

European officials announced on June 26 that Montenegro is ready for the final phase of accession to the European Union. After 12 years of accession negotiations, Montenegrin Prime Minister Milojko Spajic said Podgorica has "broken the ice" in what EU Commissioner for Enlargement Oliver Varhelyi hailed as a "historic moment." Montenegro is considered the most advanced country in the EU accession process, but accession stalled over the Montenegrin judiciary. Belgian Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib, whose country currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said Podgorica must continue to strengthen judicial independence and fight against corruption and organized crime. The announcement came as part of the Intergovernmental Conference between the European Union and Montenegro in Brussels. To read the original story on RFE/RL's Balkan Service, click here.

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