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Zelenskiy Says 'Victory Plan' Ready As Drone Attack Targets Arms Depot In Russia

A fireball rises following a Ukrainian drone attack in Russia's Tver region on September 18.
A fireball rises following a Ukrainian drone attack in Russia's Tver region on September 18.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on September 18 that Kyiv has "fully prepared" its "victory plan" to end the war with Russia and the most important thing now is the determination to implement it.

All points of the plan have been "worked out," Zelenskiy said in his evening address.

"There is and cannot be any alternative to peace, any freezing of the war or any other manipulations that will simply move Russian aggression to another stage. We need reliable and long-term security for Ukraine, and therefore for all of Europe," the president said.

The Ukrainian leader said last week that he planned to discuss the plan with U.S. President Joe Biden this month. He also said he would present it to U.S. presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. Zelenskiy is expected to be in the United States next week for the UN General Assembly meeting.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has dragged on for more than 30 months, and Zelenskiy's announcement came as Ukraine controls parts of Russia's Kursk region and as Moscow has pressed an advance into eastern Ukraine.

Zelenskiy added that "there cannot be any alternative to peace, any freezing of the war or any other manipulations that will simply move the Russian aggression to another stage. We need reliable and lasting security for Ukraine, and therefore for the whole of Europe."

Zelenskiy has said he aims to host another international peace summit outlining his vision to end the war in November, and that Russia is to be invited.

His comments came after a suspected Ukrainian strike reportedly involving more than 100 drones rocked Russia's Tver region after an arms depot was hit and set off a string of violent explosions and caused a fire 6 kilometers wide.

Emergency services launched a partial evacuation of local residents on September 18 hours after the overnight strike that appeared to target Toropets, a town about 400 kilometers west of Moscow that hosts two Russian military units and an arms depot.

The Astra Telegram channel and other social media published videos that showed massive explosions and flames erupting into the night sky near the town of Toropets, located in the west of the Tver region. Other footage posted on social media showed rows of apartment buildings in the town with windows blown out from blast waves.

Blasts At Arms Depot Shake Russia's Tver Region During Ukrainian Drone Attack
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Footage later posted on social media showed large plumes of smoke rising from the scene and rows of apartment buildings in Toropets with windows blown out from blast waves.

RFE/RL's Schemes project received satellite images from Planet Labs showing smoke over the territory of Toropets.

Earlier, satellite imagery from NASA showed multiple heat sources from the location and earthquake monitoring stations picked up seismic waves equal to a minor earthquake.

Tver regional Governor Igor Rudenya was quoted by the local government as saying in the afternoon that no deaths or serious injuries had been reported as a result of the incident, which he earlier said was caused when debris from a downed drone sparked a fire. He also said evacuated residents were being allowed to return home and all public services and infrastructure were operational.

"The air-defense system worked, the UAVs were shot down, and a fire occurred when they fell," Rudenya wrote on Telegram around 3:30 a.m. local time, without saying what was burning. Rudenya said Russian air defenses were working to repel a "massive drone attack."

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.

Reports indicated that the town is home to two Russian military units, one of which has been targeted by drone strikes twice in the past six months. Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti reported in 2018 that an arms depot was being constructed in Toropets, which has a population of around 11,000 people.

While Kyiv has not officially commented on the incident, a source in Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) told RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service on condition of anonymity that the SBU in cooperation with Ukraine's Intelligence and Special Operations Force launched the attack and "wiped the depot off the face of the Earth." The source said the depot stored Iskander and Tochka-U tactical missile systems, antiaircraft missiles, and artillery ammunition.

"The SBU, together with its counterparts from the Defense Forces, continues to methodically reduce the enemy's missile potential, which it uses to destroy Ukrainian cities," the source said.

Other reports cited Ukrainian intelligence sources saying the arms depot held significant stocks of ballistic missiles obtained by Russia from North Korea as well as glide bombs, and that an area 6 kilometers wide was engulfed in flames.

Russian state media reported early in the morning that kindergartens and schools were temporarily closed in the Zapadnodvinsk district, which borders the Toropetsk district in the Tver region, without indicating why.

Residents of the village of Tsikarevo, which is located along a lake to the east of Toropets and only 200 meters from the arms depot, were initially experiencing difficulties being evacuated and were awaiting help. RFE/RL's North Realities reported that locals had written on local chat groups that safe access was only possible by boat and that "there was nothing left of the village."

One local wrote that people were stranded on the water waiting for help, and described seeing minor damage to homes in neighboring villages. Another, however, said that he had become "homeless."

Russia's Defense Ministry has not specifically commented on the incident, saying only that 54 Ukrainian drones had targeted five western Russian regions overnight and that all of the drones had been destroyed.

The Defense Ministry, without mentioning the Tver region, said half the drones had been shot down over the Kursk region, where Russian forces have launched a counterattack to push out Ukrainian forces that entered the region and took control of large swaths of Russian territory in a surprise incursion in August.

The rest of the drones, according to the Russian Defense Ministry, were shot down over the Bryansk, Smolensk, Oryol, and Belgorod regions.

Regional authorities in the western Smolensk region bordering Belarus and in the Bryansk region bordering Ukraine also said drones had been shot down.

Kyiv has previously said its strikes against Russia are intended to hit military, energy, and transportation infrastructure that are key to Russia's ongoing attack on Ukraine.

Meanwhile in Ukraine, Russian drone and missile strikes targeted energy facilities in the northeastern city of Sumy. One person was killed in Kropyvnytskiy, the capital of the Kirovohrad region in central Ukraine.

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Husband Of Russia's Richest Woman Detained Over Deadly Shoot-Out In Moscow

Vladislav Bakalchuk has rejected all charges and considers them "absurd." (file photo)
Vladislav Bakalchuk has rejected all charges and considers them "absurd." (file photo)

Vladislav Bakalchuk, the husband of Russia's richest woman, Tatyana Bakalchuk, has been detained for 48 hours after a deadly shoot-out at the offices of Wildberries, the country's largest online retailer, founded and led by his estranged wife.

Bakalchuk's lawyers said on September 19 that their client was charged with murder, attempted murder, attacking a law enforcement officer, and the "forcible assertion of private right" as a result of the violence a day earlier.

The lawyers added that Bakalchuk had rejected all of the charges and considers them "absurd."

According to the lawyers, Bakalchuk insists that he and his people, including a lawyer, came to the Wildberries offices on September 18 for talks with his wife and her team for negotiations to resolve business-related differences.

The Bakalchuks, who have seven children, are currently in the process of a divorce.

The Investigative Committee said hours after the incident that left two security guards dead and seven people, including two police officers, wounded, that it had launched an investigation into the "elements of crimes" -- including murder, the attempted murder of two or more people, illegal weapons possession, the attempted murder of a law enforcement officer, and the "forcible assertion of private right."

The press service of Wildberries said Vladislav Bakalchuk and several other men tried to "illegally break into" the offices of the company at two locations at the same time.

Tatyana Bakalchuk said on Telegram on September 19 that her company was mourning the deaths "of our guys," adding that the families of the deceased men will receive "necessary support."

Media reports identified the two men killed in the incident as Islambek Elmurziyev, 28, and Adam Almazov, 41. Both were from the North Caucasus region of Ingushetia.

The Ostorozhno, Moskva Telegram channel reported on September 18 that 10 people allegedly involved in the standoff -- some of whom are thought to be ethnic Chechens -- were detained at the site.

The RIA Novosti news agency quoted law enforcement officials as saying that a total of around 30 people were detained and taken in for questioning after the incident.

Tatyana Bakalchuk, 48, is the richest woman in Russia. She was born to an ethnic Korean family in October 1975 in Grozny, then the capital of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Forbes estimates her worth at more than $4 billion.

Wildberries has benefited from sanctions imposed following Russia's invasion of Ukraine as Western e-commerce firms pulled out of the country.

Company revenue jumped 70 percent last year to 539 billion rubles ($5.8 billion) while its net profit rose to 19 billion rubles ($205 million).

Tatyana Bakalchuk filed for divorce after her husband asked the Kremlin-backed authoritarian leader of the North Caucasus region of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, for help in a conflict with his wife in July, claiming plans to merge Wildberries with Russ Group were harmful for the company and amounted to a hostile takeover.

Tatyana Bakalchuk was the sole owner of her empire until December 2019, when she transferred 1 percent of her business to her husband.

She is believed to have ties to powerful political figures in the Russian government, including Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin and his first deputy, Denis Manturov.

Russia experienced a wave of armed business raids in the turbulent decade immediately following the collapse of communism as groups fought over valuable former state assets. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, there has been a reversal, with the state seizing ownership of not only former state assets but private businesses launched after 1991.

With reporting by Izvestia, TASS, Ostorozhno, Moskva and RIA Novosti

Iran Flies Ambassador, 95 Patients Out Of Lebanon After Explosions

Iranian Ambassador Mojtaba Amani is transferred to a hospital on September 17.
Iranian Ambassador Mojtaba Amani is transferred to a hospital on September 17.

Iran has evacuated its ambassador from Lebanon and 95 other patients following injuries sustained in pager explosions, officials said. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi visited the injured diplomat, Mojtaba Amani, at a hospital in Tehran on September 19. State media initially reported that Amani suffered a "slight injury" after hundreds of pagers exploded on September 17. The Lebanese Hizballah militia, a U.S.-designated terrorist group that was the target of the explosions, is Iran's most important nonstate ally. A second wave of communication devices -- this time walkie-talkies -- blew up on September 18. Israel has not publicly admitted responsibility, but the country is widely assumed to be behind the coordinated blasts.

Bosnia Misses Deadline For European Growth Funds

Boznia has failed to file on time to receive EU funds for reforms.
Boznia has failed to file on time to receive EU funds for reforms.

Bosnia-Herzegovina has missed the deadline to file a reform agenda necessary to receive EU Growth Plan funds. The funds slated for Western Balkan countries are earmarked by Brussels to boost the rule of law, democracy, institutional reforms, and anti-corruption efforts. Bosnia sent a document to the European Commission on September 17, but it did not adequately address the commission's reform recommendations, according to sources in Brussels familiar with the issue. The Instrument for Preaccession Assistance, which supports reforms for EU-candidate countries, has postponed its meeting to discuss the reform agendas until October due to Sarajevo's failure to meet the deadline. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Balkan Service, click here.

U.S. Says Iranian Hackers Failed To Interest Biden Campaign With Info Stolen From Trump

Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (file photo)
Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (file photo)

The FBI and other federal U.S. agencies say Iranian hackers sent unsolicited e-mails to individuals then associated with President Joe Biden's reelection campaign that contained an excerpt taken from stolen, nonpublic material from former President Donald Trump's campaign as text in the e-mails.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), the FBI, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said in a joint statement on September 18 that Iran has made efforts to sow discord and shape the outcome of U.S. elections scheduled for November 5.

"Iranian malicious cyber-actors have continued their efforts since June to send stolen, nonpublic material associated with former President Trump’s campaign to U.S. media organizations," the joint statement said, noting there is currently no information indicating any of the recipients replied.

"This malicious cyber-activity is the latest example of Iran's multipronged approach, as noted in the joint August statement, to stoke discord and undermine confidence in our electoral process," it added.

The U.S. intelligence community has been warning it expects Russia, China, and Iran to attempt to influence U.S. politics and policies to "benefit their interests and undermine U.S. democracy and Washington's standing in the world."

U.S. voters will cast their ballots on November 5. Former President Donald Trump is the Republican Party candidate, while current Vice President Kamala Harris is the candidate for the Democratic Party.

Biden was the party's candidate until July 21, when he announced his withdrawal from the campaign and endorsed Harris as his replacement.

Hackers have also tried to target Harris's e-mail accounts as well through phishing attacks carried out by a group with suspected ties to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), the elite branch of the armed forces.

Experts say an Iranian network dubbed "Storm-2035" operates multiple inauthentic news sites on the web and social media that use AI-generated content to agitate conservative and liberal dissidence.

"Foreign actors are increasing their election influence activities as we approach November," the ODNI joint statement said.

"In particular, Russia, Iran, and China are trying by some measure to exacerbate divisions in U.S. society for their own benefit, and see election periods as moments of vulnerability. Efforts by these, or other foreign actors, to undermine our democratic institutions are a direct threat to the U.S. and will not be tolerated."

In addition to the presidency, all 435 seats in the House of Representatives and 34 of the 100 seats in the Senate are being contested in the election.

Moscow, Kyiv Give Conflicting Accounts Of Russia's Effort To Retake Captured Territory

An image released by the Russian Defense Ministry on September 13 shows Russian troops firing on Ukrainian positions in the Kursk region.
An image released by the Russian Defense Ministry on September 13 shows Russian troops firing on Ukrainian positions in the Kursk region.

Moscow and Kyiv have given conflicting accounts over the situation in Russia's western Kursk region, with Russia's military saying it had gained ground in attempts to beat back an incursion into its territory and Ukraine's military saying the Russian counteroffensive had been halted.

Russian Major General Apti Alaudinov, commander of a Chechen special forces unit and an official within the Defense Ministry, said on September 19 that Russian forces had recaptured two villages in the Kursk region.

Ukrainian military spokesman Oleksiy Dmytrashkivskiy, meanwhile, told AFP that a Russian flanking maneuver in the Kursk region was "stopped."

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 situation was stabilized and today everything is under control, they are not successful," Dmytrashkivskiy said on September 19.

In recent weeks Russia has claimed to have retaken several villages overrun by Ukrainian forces during a surprise incursion into Russian territory that began in early August. At its height, Ukraine was believed to have controlled some 1,300 square kilometers in the Kursk region that borders northeastern Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said that Kyiv does not intend to hold Russian territory but that the incursion gives Ukraine more leverage in possible peace negotiations and that captured Russian soldiers are of value for prisoner exchanges.

Three such exchanges involving Russian and Ukrainian soldiers have been conducted since the August 6 incursion.

Following a major Ukrainian drone strike that destroyed a Russian arms depot in Russia's western Tver region on September 18, Zelenskiy said that Kyiv had "fully prepared" a victory plan to end the full-scale war that Russia launched in February 2022.

Russia's counteroffensive on its own territory, which Alaudinov said resulted in the recapture of the towns of Nikolayevo-Darino and Darino on September 19, has reportedly left its troops within 15 kilometers of the Ukrainian border.

It has also put Russian forces within striking distance of the Russian city of Sverdlikovo, located near the border, which Ukrainian forces have been using as a logistics hub.

Even as Ukrainian forces advanced into Russia, the Russian military says it has made significant gains in its attempts to capture the strategic city of Pokrovsk in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region.

"Our entire front has moved forward," Alaudinov said on September 19, referring to both the counteroffensive in Russia and the advancements in eastern Ukraine.

The governor of Russia's Belgorod region, meanwhile, said on September 19 that Ukraine was continuing to target the region with shelling and drone strikes.

Vyacheslav Gladkov said that only minor damage had been reported after 22 drones and more than 160 artillery strikes.

In Ukraine, the national energy grid operator Ukrenerho said that Russian strikes in the northeastern region of Sumy had led to temporary power cuts.

Ukraine's energy infrastructure has been heavily targeted by Russia, which the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in its latest report could lead to an energy shortfall this winter.

"Further attacks on infrastructure, unforeseen equipment failures and missed maintenance cycles add further risks," the IEA said on September 19.

The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine in a report the same day said that increased Russian efforts to attack energy infrastructure beginning in the fall of 2022 had left Ukrainian cities without power for hours at a time over the course of weeks.

"There are reasonable grounds to believe that multiple aspects of the military campaign to damage or destroy Ukraine's civilian electricity and heat-producing and transmission infrastructure have violated foundational principles of international humanitarian law," the report said.

On September 19, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that 160 million euros ($178 million) taken from the proceeds of frozen Russian assets would be sent to Ukraine to help it deal with urgent humanitarian needs this winter.

With reporting by AFP, TASS, and Reuters

Ukrainian Lawmaker Put On Wanted List Amid Bribery Allegations

Andriy Odarchenko (file photo)
Andriy Odarchenko (file photo)

Ukraine's High Anti-Corruption Court has added Andriy Odarchenko, a lawmaker for the pro-presidential Servant of the People party, to its international wanted list for allegedly attempting to bribe a senior official. Odarchenko allegedly attempted to bribe the chief of the State Agency for Reconstruction and Development of Infrastructure, Mustafa Nayyem, in exchange for an allocation of funds to the Kharkiv State Biotechnology University. The court announced the move on September 19 after Odarchenko failed to show up at a hearing of his case a day earlier. Prosecutors said he might have left Ukraine. The 45-year-old Odarchenko was detained in November and later released on bail. He has rejected the charge. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, click here.

Well-Known Georgian Transgender Model Stabbed To Death

Kesaria Abramidze (file photo)
Kesaria Abramidze (file photo)

Well-known Georgian transgender model Kesaria Abramidze was stabbed to death at home in Tbilisi on September 18, police said. The Interior Ministry added on September 19 that it had detained a 26-year-old man suspected of carrying out the deadly attack. A case was launched initially into a "premeditated homicide," but later the crime was redefined as a "premeditated homicide under aggravating circumstances." If convicted, the suspect faces life in prison. The attack took place one day after Georgian lawmakers approved laws curbing LGBT rights that allow for bans on cultural events such as Pride marches. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Georgian Service, click here.

Satellite Images Show Aftermath Of Devastating Drone Strike In Russia

A satellite image homes in on large plumes of smoke near Toropets in Russia's Tver region after a massive Ukrainian drone strike on September 18.
A satellite image homes in on large plumes of smoke near Toropets in Russia's Tver region after a massive Ukrainian drone strike on September 18.

Satellite images have revealed the devastation wrought by a massive Ukrainian drone strike on an important Russian arms depot 400 kilometers west of Moscow.

The images by Planet Labs published by Schemes, the investigative unit of RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, show smoke covering a large swath of territory over the Tver region town of Toropets, which houses two military bases, hours after the early morning attack on September 18 that a Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) source said "wiped the depot off the face of the Earth."

Blasts At Arms Depot Shake Russia's Tver Region During Ukrainian Drone Attack
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Others taken by the space technology company Maxar showed that the strike involving more than 100 drones left plumes of smoke and scattered fires over the location of the depot used to store missiles, glide bombs, and other munitions.

Sensors detected seismic activity equal to that of a minor earthquake, and NASA satellites picked up heat sources that suggested that 14 square kilometers of territory were affected by fires.

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 early morning attack on September 18 sent huge fireballs into the night sky as munitions detonated, forcing a partial evacuation of local residents.

Russia's Health Ministry said that 13 people in Toropets, a town of about 11,000 people, were hospitalized following the attack. The injuries were said to be "moderate," and no deaths were reported. Russian media reported that the number of injuries was as high as 20.

Videos on social media showed massive fires and damage to buildings in Toropets itself, while locals said on chat groups that Tsikarevo, a village just 200 meters from the base, had been heavily damaged.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, speaking after the attack on September 18, lauded the "very important" result of the Ukrainian military activity on Russian soil, without mentioning the Tver region specifically. "Very effective, spectacular, but not enough," he said.

While Kyiv seldom officially takes credit for drone attacks on Russia, an SBU source told RFE/RL that the attack was carried out by the SBU in cooperation with the Intelligence and Special Operations Force.

According to the independent online news channel Verstka, the depot held munitions worth an estimated $38 million. The depot was inaugurated in 2018 by former Russian Deputy Defense Minister Dmitry Bulgakov, currently jailed on corruption charges, who said at the time that the heavily fortified depot was "protected from air and missile strikes and even the damaging effects of a nuclear explosion."

Ammunition From India Enters Ukraine, Raising Russian Ire

Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) meets with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Kremlin in Moscow in July.
Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) meets with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Kremlin in Moscow in July.

Artillery shells sold by Indian arms makers have been diverted by European customers to Ukraine and New Delhi has not intervened to stop the trade despite protests from Moscow, according to 11 Indian and European government and defense industry officials, as well as a Reuters analysis of commercially available customs data. The transfer of munitions to support Ukraine's defense against Russia has occurred for more than a year, according to the sources and the customs data. Indian arms-export regulations limit the use of weaponry to the declared purchaser, who risks future sales being terminated if unauthorized transfers occur. The Kremlin has raised the issue on at least two occasions, including during a July meeting between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Indian counterpart, three Indian officials said.

Second Wave Of Remote Detonations Kills At Least 20 People In Lebanon

People react after a reported explosion occurred on September 18 during the funeral of those killed when hundreds of paging devices exploded across Lebanon the previous day.
People react after a reported explosion occurred on September 18 during the funeral of those killed when hundreds of paging devices exploded across Lebanon the previous day.

A second wave of device explosions killed at least 20 people and wounded hundreds more in Lebanon, officials said on September 18, stoking fears of an all-out war in the region.

A security source and a witness said Hizballah, which has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, said walkie-talkies used by its members blew up in its Beirut stronghold. State media reported similar blasts in southern and eastern Lebanon.

At least one of the blasts took place near a funeral for people killed the previous day when thousands of pagers used by the group exploded. The number of dead in those attacks was 12, with more than 2,700 people wounded, including many Hizballah fighters.

The Lebanese Health Ministry described the devices targeted in the September 18 attack as walkie-talkies. Late on September 18, it revised the number of dead from 14 to 20 in a statement that also said more than 450 were wounded.

Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States and the EU, accused Israel of being behind the latest blasts, saying the action threatened stability in the region.

Hizballah and the Lebanese government also blamed Israel for what appeared to be a sophisticated remote attack. Israel, which has not commented, announced prior to the September 17 attack that it was broadening the aims of its war in Gaza against Hamas to include Hizballah, Hamas’s ally in Lebanon.

Speaking to Israeli troops on September 18, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said: “We are at the start of a new phase in the war -- it requires courage, determination and perseverance.” He made no mention of the exploding devices but praised the work of Israel’s army and security agencies, saying “the results are very impressive.”

Hizballah said on September 18 that it attacked Israeli artillery positions with rockets in the first strike since the pager blasts.

The White House warned all sides against escalation.

"We don't believe that the way to solve where we're at in this crisis is by additional military operations at all," National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters.

"We still believe that the best way to prevent escalation, to prevent another front from opening up in Lebanon, is through diplomacy," Kirby said.

Human Rights Watch's former executive director, Kenneth Roth, commented on the attacks on X, saying that international humanitarian law prohibits the use of booby traps -- objects that civilians are likely to use -- "precisely to avoid putting civilians at grave risk."

The Iranian envoy to the United Nations said in a letter that Tehran will follow up on the pager detonation attack in which its ambassador to Lebanon was injured. It added that it "reserves its rights under international law to take required measures deemed necessary to respond."

The pagers were reportedly ordered from Taiwanese manufacturer Gold Apollo, which said they had been produced by BAC Consulting in Hungary and had no parts that could be related to Gold Apollo.

“According to the cooperation agreement, we authorize BAC to use our brand trademark for product sales in designated regions, but the design and manufacturing of the products are solely the responsibility of BAC,” the statement said.

The Taiwanese company also described BAC Consulting's payment method from a Middle Eastern bank account as strange.

A Hungarian government spokesman said the company was "a trading intermediary, with no manufacturing or operational site in Hungary."

BAC Consulting was registered as a limited liability company in May 2022, the Associated Press reported. It is a one-person business registered to its owner, Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono, who describes herself on the social media platform LinkedIn as a strategic adviser and business developer.

How Have Hizballah's Devices Put It At Risk?
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated that the United States knew nothing about the attacks.

"We’re still gathering the information and gathering the facts," Blinken said at a news conference in Cairo. "Broadly speaking, we’ve been very clear and we remain very clear about the importance of all parties avoiding any steps that could further escalate the conflict that we’re trying to resolve in Gaza to see it spread to other fronts."

The UN Security Council will meet on September 20 to discuss the pager blasts, said Slovenia's UN Ambassador Samuel Zbogar, president of the 15-member council for September.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned earlier on September 18 that the pager blasts indicate "a serious risk of a dramatic escalation in Lebanon and everything must be done to avoid that escalation."

"Obviously the logic of making all these devices explode is to do it as a preemptive strike before a major military operation," he told reporters in New York.

He also said that it was very important not to weaponize civilian objects.

Guterres "urges all concerned actors to exercise maximum restraint to avert any further escalation," said Guterres spokesman Stephane Dujarric in a statement.

With reporting by AP and AFP

U.S. Envoy Calls Out Hungary For Actions Leading Toward 'Democratic Crisis'

U.S. Ambassador to Hungary David Pressman (file photo)
U.S. Ambassador to Hungary David Pressman (file photo)

The U.S. ambassador to Hungary said a troubling trend in Hungary over the past six months threatens to put it on a path toward a “democratic crisis" and raises the possibility that the United States would consider reviewing U.S.-Hungarian relations.

Ambassador David Pressman said the trend includes actions by Hungary’s political leaders and the Sovereignty Protection Office as well as negative rhetoric toward the National Judicial Council.

In a speech on September 18 at the Budapest Forum, Pressman spoke about the recent political actions and its relationship to the United States, pointing out how the governing Fidesz party of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s “control of the media” and its “attacks on civil society” have created an “atmosphere of fear.”

Concerning the media, Pressman highlighted the recent actions taken by Hungary’s Sovereignty Protection Office, including its announcement of investigations of Transparency International, Atlatszo, and an environmental citizens' group.

Transparency International has ranked Hungary as the most corrupt country in Europe for the past two years. Similarly, Atlatszo, an independent media outlet, focuses on exposing corruption and has published articles relating to Orban’s son’s extraordinary wealth.

The ambassador, who took up the post in 2022, said the recent actions go beyond the media and civil society to include the judiciary. He said that, when he first arrived in Hungary, he met with the National Judicial Council, and the meeting resulted in “one of the government’s most vitriolic campaigns, targeting the judges, labeling them as traitors, for meeting with the United States ambassador.”

These attacks, Pressman said, were strewn across every media outlet for three consecutive months and affected more than just the judges on the National Judicial Council. “Every judge in Hungary” was taught a lesson that any criticism of the government, even apolitical, was betrayal and would come with consequences.

The perpetuation of “fear and silence” seeks to marginalize and even eliminate independent voices in media and civil society, he said, adding that these actions could lead to the United States pursuing “a different kind of relationship” with Hungary.

"I continue to hope that the relationship will be a closer more honest and candid one," Pressman said.

Hungary’s membership within both the EU and NATO has led to the United States calling for a relationship based on, “transparency, dialogue, nonpartisanship, and a commitment to democracy.” He said he believes that, specifically in the last six months, Hungary has “made clear its choice” on what the relationship will look like.

As Hungary’s relationship with the United States shifts, so too does its relationship with Russia. In July, after Hungary took over the EU's six-month rotating presidency, Orban went to Moscow for a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin performing as an unsanctioned “peacemaker.” Pressman noted that a day after the “peace mission” Russia launched missiles into Ukraine’s largest children’s hospital.

As Hungary’s rhetoric becomes increasingly anti-EU and anti-NATO, Pressman called out the hypocrisy of its actions, saying that, while Budapest continues to signal that it wants to distance itself from its allies, Europe, and the United States, it also still enjoys the benefits of the NATO security umbrella and the EU’s economic benefits.

U.S. Imposes Fresh Sanctions On 12 Individuals Over Violent Repression In Iran

A poster held during a march in Paris on September 15, one day before the second anniversary of the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, which sparked a protest movement in Iran.
A poster held during a march in Paris on September 15, one day before the second anniversary of the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, which sparked a protest movement in Iran.

The United States on September 18 issued a new round of sanctions on 12 individuals who it said were tied to Iran’s "ongoing, violent repression” inside and outside the country.

Both the Treasury Department and the State Department noted that the sanctions come two years after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody and a crackdown on the protests that followed.

Amini had been detained by Iran's "morality police" for allegedly improperly wearing her hijab, or head scarf. Within hours of her detention, she was hospitalized in a coma and died a few days later.

Since Amini’s “senseless killing in the custody of Iran’s so-called Morality Police, the Iranian regime has continued to systematically violate the human rights of the Iranian people,” said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller in a statement.

The protest that followed her death against the regime’s mandatory hijab laws sparked the Women, Life, Freedom movement, which the government responded to “with brutal suppression, including murder, torture, sexual violence, and other acts of repression,” Miller said.

Bradley T. Smith, acting undersecretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a statement that despite the Iranian people’s peaceful calls for reform, Iran’s leaders have “doubled down on the regime’s well-worn tactics of violence and coercion.”

The sanctions target members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Iranian prison officials, "and those responsible for lethal operations overseas," the statement said.

Iran's security forces, including the IRGC and its Basij paramilitary force, led the crackdown on protests in cities all over Iran, the department said. It added that IRGC units used lethal force against protesters, arrested people for political expression, and attempted to intimidate the Iranian people through violence.

Among the 12 targeted by the new sanctions are Hamid Khorramdel, who serves as the commander of the IRGC’s Fatah Corps of Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, which the Treasury Department said suppressed demontrations in 2019 and 2022 by arresting and detaining protesters.

Also named is Mustafa Bazvand, commander of the IRGC and Basij Resistance Force in Mazandaran Province’s Babolsar county. Forces under Bazvand’s command led the regime’s crackdown in Babolsar in October 2022, killing at least one individual and arresting several journalists covering the violence, the department said.

The Treasury Department designated the IRGC, Basij, and Law Enforcement Forces (LEF) for sanctions in June 2011 in connection with human rights abuses and violent actions in the wake of Iran's disputed 2009 presidential election.

The sanctions freeze any assets the individuals hold in U.S. jurisdiction and bar U.S. persons from dealing with them.

Another Top Russian Military Official Held On Corruption Charges

Russia's Investigative Committee said the military officer is suspected of taking a bribe worth more than $1.5 million. (file photo)
Russia's Investigative Committee said the military officer is suspected of taking a bribe worth more than $1.5 million. (file photo)

Russia's Investigative Committee said on September 18 that it detained a top official of the Central Military District, Major General Denis Putilov, on a charge of taking a large bribe. Putilov, 45, is suspected of accepting a 140 million ruble (more than $1.5 million) bribe from a private company in exchange for contracts on repair works for military equipment. If convicted, Putilov may face up to 15 years in prison. Several top military and Defense Ministry officials have been arrested on corruption charges since President Vladimir Putin replaced Sergei Shoigu as defense minister in May with former First Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Belousov. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Updated

2 Dead, Several Wounded In Shoot-Out Near Moscow Office Of Russia's Largest Retailer

Wildberries founder and CEO Tatyana Bakalchuk (file photo)
Wildberries founder and CEO Tatyana Bakalchuk (file photo)

Two people were killed and seven -- including two police officers -- were wounded in a shoot-out near the office of Russia's largest online retailer, Wildberries, on September 18.

The Investigative Committee said it has launched a probe into the "elements of crimes" -- including murder, the attempted murder of two or more people, illegal weapons possession, the attempted murder of a law enforcement officer, and the "forcible assertion of private right."

The statement came hours after the Wildberries' press service claimed Vladislav Bakalchuk, the husband of the retailer's founder and CEO, Tatyana Bakalchuk, and several other men tried to "illegally break into the offices." It added that others tried to take over a different Wildberries office in Moscow at the same time.

Vladislav Bakalchuk called the shoot-out "a large-scale provocation," claiming that he arrived in the Wildberries' office for what he called "another stage of negotiations" related to suspending the construction of new storage buildings for the company.

The couple are currently in the process of a divorce.

"I arrived in the office along with my colleagues, but right at the entrance, I was attacked by security officers and unknown individuals, who provoked an armed conflict," Vladislav Bakalchuk said.

Meanwhile, Tatyana Bakalchuk said on Telegram that a group led by her husband and two others, whom she identified as Sergei Anufriyev and Vladimir Bakin, attempted to seize Wildberries' offices in the Russian capital.

"The statement of some sort of negotiations, to which an armed group arrived, sounds absurd, because nobody had agreed on any negotiations," Tatyana Bakalchuk wrote on Telegram.

The Ostorozhno, Moskva Telegram channel reported that 10 people allegedly involved in the standoff -- some of whom might be ethnic Chechens -- were detained at the site.

The RIA Novosti news agency quoted law enforcement officials as saying that around 30 people were detained and brought to police for questioning after the incident.

Tatyana Bakalchuk, 48, is the richest woman in Russia. Forbes estimates her worth at more than $4 billion.

Wildberries has benefited from sanctions imposed following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as Western e-commerce firms pulled out of the country. Wildberries revenue jumped 70 percent last year to 539 billion rubles ($5.8 billion). Net profit rose even faster to 19 billion rubles ($205 million).

Balachuk told Tass she expected turnover on the platform to rise 60 percent this year to more than $40 billion.

She filed for divorce after her husband asked the Kremlin-backed authoritarian leader of Russia's North Caucasus region of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, for help in a conflict with his wife in July this year, claiming plans to merge Wildberries with Russ Group, an out-of-home advertising operator, were harmful for the company and amounted to a hostile takeover.

Tatyana Bakalchuk was the sole owner of her empire until December 2019, when she transferred 1 percent of her business to her husband.

She is believed to have ties to powerful political figures in the Russian government, including Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin and his first deputy, Denis Manturov.

Russia experienced a wave of armed business raids in the turbulent decade immediately following the collapse of communism as groups fought over valuable, former state assets. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, there has been a reversal, with the state seizing ownership of not only former state assets but private businesses launched after 1991.

With reporting by Ostorozhno, Moskva and RIA Novosti
Updated

Did A Budapest-Based Company Make Pagers Used In Attack On Hizballah In Lebanon?

Different company names, among them the BAC Consulting KFT, are displayed at the entrance to the building housing them, on September 18 in Budapest.
Different company names, among them the BAC Consulting KFT, are displayed at the entrance to the building housing them, on September 18 in Budapest.

BUDAPEST -- A Budapest-based company alleged to have made the pagers used in the deadly attack on Hizballah in Lebanon appears to have only one employee working from an empty office that offers a range of services but not pager manufacturing.

At least 12 people were killed and nearly 3,000 wounded when pagers used by members of Hizballah, which has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, detonated simultaneously across Lebanon on September 17.

One official from Hizballah, Iran's most powerful proxy in the Middle East, called the attack the group's "biggest security breach" in its history.

In a second wave of attacks, walkie-talkies used by Hizballah detonated on September 18 across Lebanon's south. The country's Health Ministry said at least 20 people were killed and more than 450 injured.

Images of pagers destroyed in the September 17 simultaneous detonations indicated they were consistent with pagers made by Gold Apollo, a Taiwan-based company.

Gold Apollo founder Hsu Ching-Kuang said the pagers used in the explosion were made by a company in Europe that Gold Apollo named in a statement as BAC Consulting KFT.

The statement added that according to a cooperation agreement, BAC is authorized to "use our brand trademark for product sales in designated regions, but the design and manufacturing of the products are solely the responsibility of BAC."

"The product was not ours. It was only that it had our brand on it," Hsu told reporters at the company's offices in the northern Taiwanese city of New Taipei on September 18.

However, the head of the Budapest-based company BAC Consulting KFT later told NBC News that her company did not make the pagers.

"I don't make the pagers. I am just the intermediate. I think you got it wrong," a person who identified themselves as Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono told the U.S. broadcaster.

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According to RFE/RL's Hungarian Service, Barsony-Arcidacono, 49, has an apartment in Ujpest, a central district of Budapest, and had been engaged in business activities there since 2021.

Efforts to contact Barsony-Arcidiancono by RFE/RL were unsuccessful. The Hungarian Interior Ministry did not response to queries from RFE/RL on whether authorities planned to open a probe on the matter.

The stated address for BAC Consulting in Budapest is a peach-colored building on a mostly residential street in an outer suburb.

A person at the building who asked not to be named told RFE/RL's Hungarian Service he had never met any employees from BAC Consulting and only mail was forwarded to that address once a month.

The official register described the company as a "leadership consulting" business that was established in 2022.

The company's LinkedIn page boasts of having "over a decade of consulting experience."

"With over a decade of consulting experience, we are on an exciting and rewarding journey with our network of passionate experts with a hunger for innovation and discovery for the Environment, Innovation & Development, and International Affairs. We work internationally as agents of change with a network of consultants who put their knowledge, experience, and humanity into our projects in a connecting and authentic journey," it reads.

Besides consulting, its registered business activities also included everything from broadcast equipment production to hairdressing and even oil extraction. The company's website makes no reference to pager manufacturing. Revenue for 2022 was the equivalent of $700,000, with that figure dipping to a reported $565,000.

Barsony-Arcidiacono is listed as the CEO and sole employee of BAC Consulting KFT. On her LinkedIn page profile, she claims to have worked as an adviser for several organizations, including the European Commission, the EU’s top executive body, and UNESCO, the UN’s cultural organization.

Under education, she lists the London School of Economics and the SOAS (School of Oriental and African Studies) University in London.

Belarusian Supreme Court Rejects Rights Defender's Appeal

Leanid Sudalenka (file photo)
Leanid Sudalenka (file photo)

The Supreme Court of Belarus on September 18 rejected an appeal filed by rights defender Leanid Sudalenka against a five-year prison term he was handed in absentia in June on a charge of participating in extremist activities. Sudalenka fled Belarus in July 2023 after serving more than 2 1/2 years in prison for taking part in activities that "disrupted social order." The charge stemmed from Sudalenka's participation in mass protests in the summer of 2020 against the results of a presidential election that declared authoritarian ruler Alyaksandr Lukashenka as the winner. The opposition and many Western governments say the vote was rigged. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Belarus Service, click here.

3 Men Suspected Of Plotting 'Armed Coup' Arrested In Yerevan

Republic Square in Yerevan (file photo)
Republic Square in Yerevan (file photo)

Armenia's Investigative Committee said on September 18 three suspects, allegedly trained in Russia, had been arrested for planning an armed coup with four more still at large. The statement said five of the suspects are Armenian citizens, while two are former residents of the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The identities of the suspects were not disclosed. According to the committee, the suspects and other individuals recruited an unspecified number of Armenian nationals and former residents of Nagorno-Karabakh and transported them to Russia, where they underwent military training with the aim of overthrowing the Armenian government. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Armenian Service, click here.

Veteran Activist Briefly Detained For Questioning In Russia's Tatarstan

Veteran Tatar activist Zinnur Agliullin (file photo)
Veteran Tatar activist Zinnur Agliullin (file photo)

Telegram channels in Russia's Tatarstan quoted the wife of prominent veteran activist Zinnur Agliullin as saying that her 73-year-old husband had been detained for questioning after police searched their home on September 18. Almira Agliullina added that a police officer told her husband that a case had been launched against him on a charge of propagating extremism. Agliullin, who years ago used to lead the All-Tatar Public Center (TIU), once a leading nongovernmental organization involved in promoting and protecting Tatar history, culture, and language, was released after questioning. In 2022, the TIU was labeled an extremist group and banned in Russia. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service, click here.

Kyrgyz President's Relative Accused Of Fraud Released To House Arrest

Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov (file photo)
Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov (file photo)

BISHKEK -- A court in Bishkek announced on September 18 that a relative of President Sadyr Japarov who is suspected of fraud had been transferred from pretrial detention to house arrest.

According to the court's press service, Ulan Japarov, who is a son of President Sadyr Japarov's cousin, Rakymjan Japarov, was transferred to house arrest on August 24.

The same court ruled in July to send Ulan Japarov to pretrial detention for at least two months.

Local media has reported that Ulan Japarov is suspected of obtaining a significant amount of cash from a person in exchange for securing an official post for him, which in the end never happened.

Japarov was initially arrested in July 2023 on corruption charges.

Presidential spokesman Erbol Sultanbaev said at the time that Ulan Japarov was suspected of involvement in corruption linked to the Customs Service.

In October 2023, the Birinchi Mai district court transferred Japarov to house arrest.

In July this year, media reports in the Central Asian country said a brother-in-law of the chief of the State Committee for National Security (UKMK), Kamchybek Tashiev, was arrested on a fraud charge.

The reports gave the man's initials as A.T.O.

Sources close to the UKMK leadership confirmed to RFE/RL that a man with those initials was arrested but did not give any further details.

Neither the authorities nor Tashiev have commented on the reports.

The Birinchi Mai district court told RFE/RL at the time that its judge sent A.T.O. to pretrial detention for at least two months. The court neither elaborated on the case nor confirmed if the suspect was related to Tashiev.

Also in July, the Birinchi Mai district court said the boyfriend of President Japarov's niece had been arrested on a charge of producing illegal drugs.

Aftandil Sabyrbekov, the boyfriend of Lazzat Nurgojoeva, who is a daughter of President Japarov's younger brother, Davletbek, was arrested days after a video showing him proposing to Nurgojoeva in a lavish ceremony circulated on the Internet, sparking a public outcry.

Imprisoned Siberian Journalist Afanasyev Honored With 2024 Free Media Award

Journalist Mikhail Afanasyev waits in a defendant's cage in a courtroom in Abakan, Russia, in 2023.
Journalist Mikhail Afanasyev waits in a defendant's cage in a courtroom in Abakan, Russia, in 2023.

Mikhail Afanasyev, the imprisoned editor in chief of the Novy fokus (New Focus) online newspaper covering the Siberian region of Khakassia, has been given a 2024 Free Media Award for journalistic bravery. The chief of the Center for Media Rights, Galina Arapova, accepted the award on Afanasyev's behalf at a ceremony in Oslo on September 17. Afanasyev was sentenced to 5 1/2 years in prison on a charge of discrediting Russia's armed forces after reporting about the refusal of local riot police officers to participate in Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Siberia.Realities, click here.

Top EU Diplomat Warns Georgia Over Law Restricting LGBT Rights

Georgian religious protesters take part in the anti-LGBT rally in central Tbilisi in 2022.
Georgian religious protesters take part in the anti-LGBT rally in central Tbilisi in 2022.

The European Union's top diplomat has called on Georgia to scrap legislation approved by lawmakers that curbs LGBT rights and allows for bans on cultural events such as Pride marches.

The so-called Family Values bill was pushed through parliament by the ruling Georgian Dream party on September 17. Opposition members boycotted the vote and protesters rallied against it outside parliament, underscoring the dramatically polarized political landscape in the Caucasus nation ahead of national elections in October.

"The Georgian Parliament adopted laws on 'family values and protection of minors’ which will undermine the fundamental rights of the people and increase discrimination & stigmatization,"Josep Borrell, the high representative of the EU for foreign affairs, wrote in a post on X on September 18.

"I call on Georgia to withdraw this legislation, further derailing the country from its EU path."

The package of legal changes, which came under the title On Family Values And Protection Of Minors, amends 18 current laws, including on free speech and expression, as well as broadcasting.

It allows for bans on gatherings that promote the notion of a person identifying as a gender other than "his or her biological sex" or same-sex orientation or relationships.

The initiative passed by a vote of 84-0 in a chamber that most of the opposition has boycotted since May.

That's when Georgian Dream lawmakers approved a "foreign influence" bill that Georgians and Western governments liken to the decade-old "foreign agent" law used by Russian authorities to clamp down on dissent with broad discretion.

They ended up overriding a presidential veto of the legislation to enact it.

The United States and other Western states have expressed concern about the law, which requires organizations that receive more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad to register as "agents of foreign influence."

On September 16, the United States slapped sanctions on more than 60 Georgians, including two members of the government, who it said had "undermined" democracy and human rights in the country.

Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze met on September 17 with U.S. Ambassador Robin Dunnigan and warned that Georgia might revise ties with the United States in response to the new sanctions.

"If one more such step is taken, this might lead to a revision of Georgia's stance on U.S.-Georgian relations," Kobakhidze said in the meeting with Dunnigan, according to a statement by the prime minister's office.

Tens of thousands of Georgians demonstrated against the bill despite a brutal crackdown and violent retaliation. Most protesters referred to the bill as "the Russian law" because of its similarity to decade-old legislation in Russia that has contributed to a fierce clampdown on independent media and public dissent there.

The European Union reacted to the enactment of the bill by pausing EU accession negotiations, while the United States opted to launch a "comprehensive review" of relations with Georgia.

In setting election day for October 26, Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili called the vote a choice between "being Russia's slave or cooperation with Europe."

Opinion polls show that Georgian Dream remains the country's single most popular party ahead of the election.

Ukrainian World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Usyk Briefly Detained In Poland

Oleksandr Usyk celebrates winning a fight in Wroclaw, Poland, in August 2023.
Oleksandr Usyk celebrates winning a fight in Wroclaw, Poland, in August 2023.

Ukraine's unified heavyweight world boxing champion, Oleksandr Usyk, has been released at the Krakow airport in Poland after being detained late on September 17, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Telegram. A video appeared on social media showing Usyk in handcuffs at the airport. It remains unclear why the world champion was detained. He described on Instagram his brief detention as "a misunderstanding that was quickly resolved." The WBC, WBO, and WBA champion, who also won gold at the 2012 London Olympics, is considered a national hero in Ukraine. Usyk has publicly supported Ukraine's efforts to stand against Russia's ongoing attack of his homeland.

Kara-Murza Advocates For Prisoners Still Held In Russia In Return Trip To U.S. Capitol

Vladimir Kara-Murza (file photo)
Vladimir Kara-Murza (file photo)

WASHINGTON -- The Biden administration and U.S. lawmakers promised to continue fighting for the freedom of Russian and Belarusian political prisoners as they welcomed Vladimir Kara-Murza back to the U.S. Capitol.

Kara-Murza, whose work with Congress was instrumental in passing the U.S. Magnitsky Act, which sets out sanctions for human rights violators in Russia, was among 16 political prisoners released by the Kremlin last month in exchange for eight Russians held in the West for crimes including murder, cybertheft, and espionage.

The 43-year old Kara-Murza, who was sentenced last year to a quarter-century in prison for his criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin and the invasion of Ukraine, told a packed room at the Senate building in Washington on September 17 that there were many more political prisoners than the 1,300 indicated in public data and vowed to work with U.S. lawmakers to secure their freedom.

"There are so so many people in Russian prisons today who are there for the only reason that they have opposed, publicly opposed, Putin's murderous war on aggression. It's the fastest-growing segment of Russian prisoners," he said. "Now that I have been saved, I think about all those who have been left behind."

Kara-Murza highlighted the case of Yury Kokhovets, who was sentenced a day earlier by a Moscow court to five years in prison for anti-war comments he made to RFE/RL's Russian Service in July 2022.

U.S. officials and lawmakers who worked to free Kara-Murza were present at the reception and said they will continue to use administrative tools to fight for those left behind in Russian prisons.

"We're not going to stop working on behalf of those who are detained unjustly, and we're not going to forget the purpose of this cause," Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs James O'Brien said. "We have a lot of tools to and we will use them. We will continue to pursue their freedom as we work."

Senator Roger Wicker (Republican-Mississippi) told the audience that he just had a call to discuss plans to punish Russia further for its actions though he did not give any details.

Senator Ben Cardin (Democrat-Maryland), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, called Kara-Murza's return to Capitol Hill a "day of celebration," but said the United States "must never forget" the other political prisoners left behind in Russia.

"There is a lot more that we need to do," he said.

Senator Jean Shaheen (Democrat-New Hampshire) said the United States must work to free Belarusian political prisoners as well.

Kara-Murza said putting a public spotlight on the political prisoners abroad was more than just talk.

"Whatever the cynics and the skeptics will tell you, advocacy works and public attention protects and public attention saves," he said.

Quarter-Century

Kara-Murza, a close associate of assassinated Russian politician Boris Nemtsov, worked with members of Congress to pass the Magnitsky Act in 2012, which gave the executive branch the right to place sanctions on Russian officials for human rights abuses and corruption.

Putin fought hard to overturn the law, which U.S. presidents have used to target people close to the Kremlin.

Kara-Murza was arrested in April 2022 shortly after returning to Russia from a trip to the United States and Europe, where he spoke out against the invasion.

Putin had weeks earlier outlawed criticism of the war and the Russian armed forces. Russian police and security services were quick to act on it, arresting people for social media posts and public acts.

In explaining his decision at the time to return, Kara-Murza said he was a Russian politician and had to be in his country to be politically relevant.

Representative Steve Cohen (Democrat-Tennesse), who was among the lawmakers actively pushing for his release, told Kara-Murza: "You have been to hell and back. Don't go again."

Kosovar PM Dismisses Serbia's Demands As EU Dialogue Fails To Bring Negotiators Together

Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti (file photo)
Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti (file photo)

Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti has dismissed as "unconscionable" demands made last week by Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic for the return of local Serbs to Kosovar institutions.

Kurti, responding to Vucic's demands for the first time, also said on September 17 that they were part of an "aggressive campaign for new conflicts."

The response came as senior representatives from Serbia and Kosovo gathered in Brussels for internationally mediated talks on implementing past commitments aimed at normalizing relations between the Balkan neighbors.

The countries' chief negotiators in the so-called "dialogue" -- Serbia's director for relations with Kosovo, Petar Petkovic, and Kosovar Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislimi -- met separately with EU envoy Miroslav Lajcak, but he was unable to bring the parties together for a trilateral meeting.

Lajcak said he would continue to be available to the parties "and we will continue in the coming weeks." Bislimi and Petkovic blamed each other for the failure of the sides to agree to a three-way meeting.

Similar meetings have recently fallen through despite heavy public pressure from outside diplomats keen to patch a security risk in Southeastern Europe and regain regional momentum for further Western integration and stem the influence of outside powers Russia and China.

Belgrade has never acknowledged the independence that Pristina declared in 2008, and violent flare-ups and standoffs persist between Kosovar authorities and tens of thousands of ethnic Serbs in northern Kosovo in a region still scarred by brutal wars and ethnic cleansing in the 1990s.

Among the demands Vucic laid out last week are new local elections in the north, the return of Serbs to the Kosovo Police force and judiciary, and the withdrawal of Kosovo Police special units from the northern region. He said it was his intention to boost Belgrade's support for Serbs in Kosovo "significantly and dramatically."

"His demands, his measures, are out of desperation and represent irrationality and are not peaceful at all, but rather part of the aggressive campaign for new conflicts that undoubtedly have no place in Kosovo," Kurti said in his response.

Vucic said his demands must be met in order to make progress in the dialogue between Belgrade and Pristina.

He also urged Serbs who had quit jobs with police and other Kosovar institutions in protest nearly two years ago to retake the jobs, and he laid out administrative plans to help Serbs draw salaries and other financial benefits on the Serbian side of the joint border.

Some Serbs have expressed anger and said they feel betrayed by Vucic's about-face.

The demands were welcomed by the European Union as a positive move.

Tensions have been high in Kosovo since Pristina shut down several Serbian-backed parallel institutions at the end of August. Pristina calls the so-called "parallel" institutions backed by Belgrade "illegal."

Kurti said his own demands were "peaceful and rational" compared to those of the Serbian leader.

First among them are that Serbia hand over Milan Radoicic, who is wanted in Kosovo in connection with an armed attack in Banjska last year. Radoicic, the fugitive former vice president of the Serbian List party accused of leading and organizing the attack, is believed to be in Serbia.

Kosovar authorities last week announced the indictment of 45 individuals on terrorism charges over a commando-style operation at a monastery in northern Kosovo last year that killed an ethnic Albanian police officer and wounded another.

Kurti also said Kosovo wants an agreement on normalization of relations to be signed and it also wants the withdrawal of a letter from former Prime Minister Ana Brnabic rejecting Kosovo's independence and a seat for Kosovo at the United Nations.

Lajcak said Serbia had already withdrawn the letter, but Vucic neither confirmed nor denied this when he was asked about it last week.

Kosovo and Serbia have been negotiating normalization since 2011 through the Brussels dialogue, supervised by the EU. They reached an agreement on normalization steps in early 2023, but key elements of the deal remain unfulfilled. Kosovo insists that this agreement must be signed first, although the EU says it is binding on the parties regardless of signature.

Kosovo, which is majority ethnic Albanian, has faced increased criticism from international partners, including the United States and European Union, over "unilateral" and "uncoordinated" actions affecting the daily lives of its ethnic Serb minority.

Belgrade and EU and U.S. officials have also pressed for Pristina to lay the legal groundwork to establish an association of mostly Serb municipalities that it originally pledged to create more than a decade ago.

Kosovar officials have countered that the Serbian side is trying to implement measures halfway, including from oral commitments made in Ohrid early last year.

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