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Uzbek Teacher Fined For Hitting Student In Russian-Language Dispute

Uzbek capital Tashkent (file photo)
Uzbek capital Tashkent (file photo)

A teacher in Tashkent was fined 6.8 million soms ($534) for hitting a sixth-grade student who asked why she did not speak Russian during a Russian-language class. A video of the incident went viral, leading to the dismissal of the school principal. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on September 25 that Russia had requested official explanations from Uzbekistan. In response, Alisher Qodirov, deputy chairman of Uzbekistan's parliament, said that Russia should focus on its own issues rather than interfering in Uzbekistan’s internal affairs. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Uzbek Service, click here.

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First Georgian NGOs Added To 'Foreign Agents' Registry Under Controversial Law

Demonstrators take to the streets of Tbilisi on May 28 to protest against the "foreign agents" law, which critics have compared to similar legislation in Russia widely used to suppress dissent and weaken democratic institutions.
Demonstrators take to the streets of Tbilisi on May 28 to protest against the "foreign agents" law, which critics have compared to similar legislation in Russia widely used to suppress dissent and weaken democratic institutions.

Nine Georgian NGOs have been added to the country's register of "foreign agents," marking the first time since a controversial law on foreign influence came into effect two months ago that additions have been made to the list.

Five NGOs initially were added on October 1: Youth Organization of Ukrainians in Georgia -- Svitanok, Professional Union of Farmers and Agricultural Workers of Georgia, Kutaisi Youth House, Union of Christians, and the Jewish Cultural and Educational Foundation.

Shortly afterward, four other organizations were added: Girls -- World Leaders, Tbilisi Youth House, Inclusive Practices, and the Association of Initiatives, Development and Employment.

The names of these organizations, along with their financial disclosures, have been published on the official website of Georgia's public registry of foreign agents.

According to the law, media outlets and NGOs that received more than 20 percent of their funding from foreign sources in 2023 are required to register as entities working "in the interest of a foreign force." The majority of Georgian media and nonprofits received that level of funding from outside the country last year.

The registration process must be completed through the House of Justice in Tbilisi.

Additionally, the Justice Ministry has been granted broad powers to monitor and investigate organizations for compliance, including the authority to access sensitive information such as personal data.

Many organizations and media outlets have expressed strong opposition to the law, and several have publicly refused to comply. Noncompliance, including failure to register, carries heavy financial penalties.

Georgia's international partners have voiced serious concerns about the law, which critics argue mirrors Russia's controversial "foreign agents" legislation, a tool widely used by Moscow to suppress dissent and weaken democratic institutions.

EU Ambassador to Georgia Pawel Herczynski has warned the law significantly hampers Georgia's prospects of joining the European Union. He noted Georgia's EU accession process has been put on hold as a result. In addition, Georgia's visa-free travel in the Schengen Zone, a key diplomatic achievement, is now under threat.

Despite this, the ruling Georgian Dream party remains steadfast in its claims that the country is on track for EU membership by 2030.

While the law has drawn international criticism, it has been praised by Moscow. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, nationalist political philosopher Aleksandr Dugin, State Duma Chairman Vyacheslav Volodin, and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov have all commended the Georgian government for passing the law.

Legal challenges against the law have already been filed. Five lawsuits have been submitted to the Constitutional Court of Georgia requesting the law be suspended. Although the court concluded three days of hearings on September 1, no ruling has been announced.

In response to the law, the United States, a longtime supporter of Georgia's NATO and EU aspirations, announced visa restrictions on Georgian officials involved in passing the legislation and launched a comprehensive review of bilateral relations.

Iran Preparing Imminent Ballistic Missile Attack On Israel, U.S. Official Says

An Israeli Army main battle tank is deployed at a position along the border with Lebanon in northern Israel on October 1.
An Israeli Army main battle tank is deployed at a position along the border with Lebanon in northern Israel on October 1.

Iran is preparing to "imminently" launch a ballistic missile attack on Israel, according to a senior U.S. administration official who warned of "severe consequences" should it take place. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the United States is actively supporting Israeli defensive preparations. Iran’s state media has not suggested any attack is imminent. This comes after the Israeli military on October 1 warned people to evacuate nearly two dozen Lebanese border communities hours after announcing what it said were limited ground operations against Hezbollah. White House officials did not immediately offer any evidence backing its intelligence finding.

Azerbaijani Opposition Figure Dies After Brutal Attack In France

Vidadi Isgandarli (file photo)
Vidadi Isgandarli (file photo)

Vidadi Isgandarli, an Azerbaijani opposition figure in exile well-known for his fierce criticism of the government, has died in France after being brutally beaten and stabbed in an attack at his apartment that his family says was politically motivated.

Oktay Isgandarli confirmed his brother's death to RFE/RL on October 1 after doctors fought for more than a day to keep him alive.

The deadly attack on Isgandarli follows a similar pattern of violence against Azerbaijani opposition figures in exile; in 2021, another politician in exile, Mohammad Mirzali, survived being stabbed.

"My brother had no idea who the attackers were or what motivated the assault.... They did not speak, and they wore masks, making it impossible to identify them," Oktay Isgandarli told RFE/RL.

"I have no doubt this is a politically motivated assassination. My brother survived a previous attack by approximately 15 assailants in 2022 here in France."

Oktay Isgandarli said he received a desperate video call from his brother early on September 29 as he clutched a pillow to his abdomen to try and staunch the bleeding after being attacked by three masked men who had broken into his apartment in Mulhouse in eastern France.

"I contacted the authorities and provided them with my brother's address," he said.

"When I arrived, the police had cordoned off the area, and I was unable to speak with him before he was rushed to the hospital."

Doctors said Vidadi Isgandarli was stabbed at least 21 times in the abdomen as well as blows to the body and head.

They managed to resuscitate him, but he never regained consciousness and succumbed to his injuries early on October 1, they said.

Vidadi Isgandarli was known as a vocal critic of the Azerbaijani government and President Ilham Aliyev, who has maintained a tight grip on power since 2003.

In 2010, Vidadi Isgandarli participated in parliamentary elections, which he denounced as fraudulent after opposition candidates failed to get elected. He then helped organize protests against the official election results.

Arrested in 2011 and charged with various offenses, including assault and interference with election officials, Vidadi denied the allegations, claiming they were politically motivated.

He was sentenced to 3 1/2 years in prison but was released early in December 2012 in a presidential amnesty.

Fearing further persecution, Vidadi, his brother, and their families emigrated to France in 2015.

With Azerbaijan set to host the climate conference COP29 in November, right groups have said it is imperative that the event is used also to shine a spotlight on the country and the deteriorating human rights situation there.

Earlier this year, Amnesty International noted that it and other human rights groups had documented the "widespread abuse" by the Azerbaijani authorities of the criminal justice system to crack down on human rights including the right to freedom of expression, often "detaining and falsely charging their critics with economic crimes."

Updated

Iran Launches Massive Ballistic Missile Attack On Israel

People take cover on the side of a road as a siren sounds a warning of incoming missiles fired from Iran on a freeway in Shoresh, between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, on October 1.
People take cover on the side of a road as a siren sounds a warning of incoming missiles fired from Iran on a freeway in Shoresh, between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, on October 1.

Iran launched a massive ballistic missile attack at Israel on October 1 in retaliation for Israel's campaign against Lebanon's Hezbollah in a new escalation of the conflict between Israel and the Iran-backed militant group.

Military spokesman Daniel Hagari said the military was not aware of any injuries and announced about an hour after the attack was launched that it was safe for Israelis to leave their bomb shelters. He described the attack as serious and said it would have "consequences."

One Palestinian was killed by falling debris from an intercepted missile, according to the mayor of the city of Jericho in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, and Israeli police reported that at least six people were killed and nine wounded in a shooting and stabbing attack in Tel Aviv.

U.S. President Joe Biden said the United States was prepared to help Israel defend itself as he and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee in the November 5 presidential election, monitored the attack from the White House situation room. National-security adviser Jake Sullivan called it a significant escalation by Iran.

Alarms sounded across Israel as Israelis heeded government warnings and fled into bomb shelters just before the missiles started appearing in the night sky.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said the missile attack targeted three military bases around Tel Aviv. It also warned that if Israel retaliated, Tehran's response would be "more crushing and ruinous." Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States and the EU, praised the attack as "heroic."

Iranian Missiles Trigger Israeli Air Defenses
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Tel Aviv police said the "terrorist" attack in the city occurred just minutes before Iran launched the missile attack. TV footage showed gunmen getting off a tram at a a station and opening fire. They were later killed by civilians and inspectors using their own firearms, police said.

There has been no claim of responsibility, but Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said they were Palestinians from the West Bank city of Hebron.

Earlier on October 1, the Israeli military said it had launched "targeted and precise" raids inside Lebanon in what it called a "limited" ground incursion that started overnight, adding that its troops were engaged in "heavy fighting" with Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Iran had vowed to retaliate for Israeli air strikes in recent weeks that killed the top leadership of its Hezbollah allies in Lebanon, including Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the militant group, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States.

The European Union blacklists Hezbollah's armed wing but not its political party, which has seats in the Lebanese parliament.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant spoke with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin just before the attack, the Israeli Defense Ministry said in a statement.

They discussed Israel's "operational readiness to defend its citizens and military assets, as well as U.S. force posture in the region," the statement said.

The Israeli military earlier warned people to evacuate nearly two dozen Lebanese border communities hours. It said its troops were engaged in "heavy fighting" with Iran-backed Hezbollah, the militant group that controls much of the area, despite U.S. opposition to the move amid fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East.

An Israeli security official said elite commando and paratrooper units were involved in incursions in southern Lebanon that went only a short distance over the border.

Earlier, Avichay Adraee, an Israeli military spokesman, wrote a message published in Arabic on Telegram warning about fighting taking place in southern Lebanon.

"For your personal safety, we ask you not to travel by vehicles from the north to the southern area of the Litani River," the message said.

Adraee said the operation involved the elite 98th Division, which was recently deployed to the north from Gaza, and would target Hezbollah strongholds.

Israel has vowed to keep up the pressure on Hezbollah and has declared a military zone in parts of its northern border with Lebanon, despite calls from around the world to de-escalate the situation.

British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said Israel should not get "bogged down in a quagmire" in Lebanon.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and expressed Britain's steadfast commitment to Israeli security and the protection of civilians.

Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said Israel should stop conducting the ground raids into Lebanon to avoid an escalation of the conflict.

Israel Launches 'Ground Operation' In Lebanon
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The launching of the ground operation came just hours after Biden, when asked whether he was comfortable with Israel taking such a move in Lebanon, said: “I'm comfortable with them stopping. We should have a cease-fire now.”

Later, as tensions mounted, the White House said in a statement that Washington believes the way to get an Israel-Lebanon cease-fire is to have a diplomatic resolution.

Israel has launched withering air attacks on Hezbollah in recent weeks, including missile strikes that killed the group's longtime leader, Hassan Nasrallah, as well as claiming the lives of multiple Hezbollah leaders and other members of sanctioned militant groups.

Israeli attacks in Lebanon and in Yemen against Iran-backed Huthi rebels and claims by Tehran-allied Hezbollah militants that they had fired into Israel with their new "Nour missile" -- which observers say might be a ballistic missile -- led to increased fears that there could be an all-out war in the Middle East.

Separately, Iran said it would not deploy forces to Lebanon or the Gaza Strip to fight Israel amid the intensified attacks against the Hezbollah in Lebanon.

"There is no need to send extra or volunteer forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran," Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said on September 30, saying Lebanon and fighters in the Palestinian territories "have the capability and strength to defend themselves against the aggression."

Kanani's statement came as Naim Qassem, deputy head of Hezbollah, said in a video message that a replacement for Nasrallah will be chosen "sooner, rather than later."

In the message, he said the selection will be made within the regular mechanisms of Hezbollah. He gave no further details.

Nasrallah was killed last week in an Israeli air strike on the southern command center of Hezbollah.

Updated

At Least 8 Dead In Russian Strikes As Ukraine Marks 'Defenders Day'

Emergency personnel work at the site of a strike in Zaporizhzhya on October 1.
Emergency personnel work at the site of a strike in Zaporizhzhya on October 1.

At least eight people were killed and several wounded in Russian strikes on the Ukrainian regions of Kherson, Zaporizhzhya, and Sumy on October 1 as the embattled country marked Defenders Day amid an increasingly difficult situation on the battlefield in the east, where Moscow's grinding offensive is making incremental progress.

"A Russian strike on Kherson, right in the city center. As of now, 6 deaths have been confirmed," President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote on X, adding that six more people were wounded.

The deaths occurred when Russian projectiles struck a marketplace in downtown Kherson, while the other six were wounded in a separate strike on a bus stop in the southern city, regional Governor Oleksandr Prokudin said on Telegram.

Kherson city was liberated by Ukrainian troops in November 2022, forcing Russian soldiers to retreat eastward across the Dnieper River. But Russia continued to pound Kherson on a regular basis from across the river, leaving numerous civilian casualties as well as damaging civilian and energy infrastructure.

In Zaporizhzhya, Russia attacked apartment buildings and infrastructure with glide bombs, killing one person and wounding six, regional Governor Ivan Fedorov said.

Meanwhile, Ukraine's Energy Ministry reported on October 1 that Russian troops attacked the main substation and cut off a power line to the Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant -- Europe's largest -- which was on the verge of a blackout.

In Sumy, a northeastern region that borders Russia, air strikes killed a woman and wounded two men in the Esman community, the regional prosecutor's office reported.

Across Ukraine, at 9 a.m. local time a minute of silence was held in memory of all Ukrainians who have given their lives defending the independence of their country.

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.

In a message on Telegram, Ukraine's top military commander, General Oleksandr Syrskiy, congratulated the Ukrainian soldiers, whom he called "indomitable warriors," who took on the invading Russian forces and over the past 2 1/2 years "gave battle to the so-called 'second army of the world' and stopped it" in its tracks.

Defense Minister Rustem Umerov also issued a statement thanking every Ukrainian soldier for their unity, courage, and resilience.

"We know what we are fighting for: for our home, for our relatives who dream of a peaceful sky. For cities and villages waiting for liberation. For future generations who will live on their land without fear. And for the memory of those who over the centuries gave their lives for our freedom. Eternal honor to the sons and daughters of Ukraine, who sacrificed their lives for our state," Umerov said in his address.

Separately, Umerov announced the dismissal of three of his deputies. He said on social media he had asked the government to relieve Stanislav Haider, Oleksandr Serhiy and Yuriy Dzhygyr of their duties as deputy defense ministers, and Lyudmyla Darahan as ministry secretary.

"I have set the task of completing the process of cleansing the system of procurement in close cooperation with law enforcement and anti-corruption authorities," Umerov said.

October 1 was declared Defenders' Day in 2014, months after Russia illegally occupied Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and parts of the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions. It replaced a former holiday marked on February 23 called Defender of the Fatherland Day, which had been instituted in Soviet times.

Earlier in the morning, Ukraine's air force said in a statement on Telegram that its air defenses shot down 29 out of 32 drones launched by Russia's military at seven Ukrainian regions.

The drones were shot down in the regions of Cherkasy, Kirovohrad, Mykolayiv, Kherson, Poltava, Sumy, and Dnipropetrovsk, the air force said, adding that three other drones lost their way "as a result of electronic warfare counteraction" and did not cause any damage.

On September 30, Zelenskiy again acknowledged the "very, very difficult" situation the military is facing in the east, where Russian forces have been attempting for months to capture the logistics hub of Pokrovsk in the Donetsk region,

Following a meeting with top commanders, Zelenskiy said that "reports on each of our frontline sectors, our capabilities, our future capabilities and our specific tasks: The situation is very, very difficult."

Zelenskiy stressed the importance of the upcoming Ukraine Defense Contract Meeting at the U.S. air base at Ramstein in Germany and stressed the need to make gains ahead of the gathering to assure Western allies of Ukraine's ability to make battlefield gains.

Updated

Rutte Pledges Strong Support For Ukraine As He Takes Reins At NATO

Mark Rutte (left) and Jens Stoltenberg shake hands as Rutte succeeds Stoltenberg as NATO chief at the alliance headquarters in Brussels on October 1.
Mark Rutte (left) and Jens Stoltenberg shake hands as Rutte succeeds Stoltenberg as NATO chief at the alliance headquarters in Brussels on October 1.

Former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte immediately pledged his strong support for Ukraine as he took over as the head of NATO on October 1 at a pivotal time in the military alliance's history as Russia's full-scale invasion of its neighbor approaches the 1,000-day mark.

Rutte, the longest-serving prime minister in the history of the Netherlands, met with outgoing Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at NATO headquarters in Brussels, where they laid a wreath to fallen personnel from the alliance as they were surrounded by the flags of its 32 member countries.

They then proceeded into the great hall where top-level North Atlantic Council meetings are held, with Stoltenberg, who leaves after a decade at NATO's helm, presented him with a Viking gavel to use when chairing meetings.

"There can be no lasting security in Europe without a strong, independent Ukraine," Rutte told the hall in his first speech in office, giving an affirmation of the commitment made by the organization's leaders in 2008 that "Ukraine's rightful place is in NATO."

"We have to make sure that Ukraine prevails as a sovereign, independent, democratic nation," Rutte told reporters afterward.

NATO, founded in 1949 to deter and defend against any attack on its members in Western Europe by the Soviet Union, has found itself back in the diplomatic spotlight due to the war in Ukraine and a Russia, led by its autocratic president, Vladimir Putin.

Rutte appears to enjoy close relations with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

As Dutch prime minister, he helped get F-16 fighter aircraft sent to Ukraine, secured stronger EU economic sanctions on Moscow despite Dutch dependency on trade, and helped move Ukraine along the path toward EU membership.

The Ukrainian leader applauded Rutte's taking the helm of the alliance, saying he "looks forward to working" together to strengthen Euro-Atlantic security as Ukraine continues on its path towards full-fledged NATO membership.

"Only together, Ukraine and its allies, can we truly guarantee a peaceful, stable, and secure Europe," he said in a post on X.

But Rutte, the 57-year-old Hague-born politician known for his affable manner, faces the tricky question of whether Ukraine will get an invitation to join NATO.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow that Putin knew Rutte well from previous meetings and that no change in policy is expected.

"Our expectations are that the North Atlantic alliance will continue to work in the same direction in which it has been working," he said.

"At one time, there were hopes for the possibility of building good pragmatic relations -- at least, such a dialogue was conducted -- but subsequently we know that the Netherlands took a rather irreconcilable position, a position on the complete exclusion of any contacts with our country," he added.

Adding to the balancing act, Rutte takes over NATO just over a month before the United States, the alliance’s biggest funding source, holds a presidential election between Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump.

The former president has been critical of NATO and has not said whether he wants Kyiv to come out victorious in repelling the Kremlin's invasion. Harris has supported continuing to send arms to help Ukraine fight back.

"I know both candidates very well.... I will be able to work with both. Whatever is the outcome of the election," he said.

"I worked for four years with Donald Trump. He was the one pushing us to spend more (on defense), and he achieved because indeed, at the moment, we are now at a much higher spending level than we were when he took office," Rutte added, noting Harris had a "fantastic record" as vice president and is "a highly respected leader."

With reporting by Rikard Jozwiak, Reuters, and AP

IAEA Says Grossi To Visit Belarus

The Astravets nuclear power plant in northwestern Belarus (file photo)
The Astravets nuclear power plant in northwestern Belarus (file photo)

Rafael Grossi, the head of the UN's nuclear watchdog, is to visit Belarus on October 1, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said in a statement. Grossi will hold "high-level meetings" in Minsk and will visit the country's nuclear power plant in Astravets, in northwestern Belarus, the IAEA said. Grossi and his team "will assess the situation at the site almost four years after it was connected to the grid and its progress in addressing the findings of an IAEA operational safety review in 2021," the statement said, adding that Grossi's trip comes as the agency "is focusing on ensuring nuclear safety and security in the region."

Pakistani Court Denies Bail For Imprisoned Ex-PM Khan And His Wife

Supporters in Pakistan hold a photo of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan (file photo).
Supporters in Pakistan hold a photo of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan (file photo).

A Pakistani court on September 30 denied a bail application by imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his wife, Bushra Bibi, in a graft case, their lawyer said. It's another blow to the popular opposition leader, who has been in prison for more than a year after being convicted on multiple charges. Khan has been embroiled in more than 150 cases since 2022, when he was ousted from power in a no-confidence vote in parliament after several political allies deserted him. He has accused the military and his archenemy and current Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif of ousting him under a U.S. plot, charges which they have denied.

U.S. Must Prepare For 'Long-Term' Confrontation With Russia: Helsinki Commission

U.S. Helsinki Commission Chairmen Joe Wilson (right) during 2023 visit to Bucha, Ukraine.
U.S. Helsinki Commission Chairmen Joe Wilson (right) during 2023 visit to Bucha, Ukraine.

WASHINGTON -- The United States must prepare for a "long-term" confrontation with Russia that won't end when authoritarian President Vladimir Putin departs from the political scene, according to a new report by a bipartisan commission.

Ukraine's defeat of Russia on the battlefield is critical to winning that confrontation, and Washington should do all it can to ensure Kyiv is victorious, the U.S. Helsinki Commission stated in its September 30 report.

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 commission, which was set up in 1975 to monitor human rights in the Soviet bloc, is composed of 18 lawmakers evenly split between the House of Representatives and Senate as well as three representatives of the executive branch.

"There will be no hope for a peaceful and stable Russia while it remains engaged in war and occupation of its neighbors," the commission said in the report.

"Ukraine defeating the Russian invaders is a necessary, but not sufficient, step towards not only forcing Russia into significant reflection and reform, but also towards uprooting Russian influence and countering Russian aggression more broadly."

The commission's report comes as the future of U.S. military support for Kyiv in its nearly three-year defensive war against Russia is uncertain with a wing of the Republican party, led by presidential candidate Donald Trump, questioning the significant financial commitment.

Congress has allocated $175 billion to support Ukraine since Russia invaded in February 2022, with the majority of the funding spent at home for weapons production and other goods and services. Ukraine would need another large U.S. aid package early next year if it hopes to drive Russian forces from its territory.

Trump, who claims to have a good relationship with Putin, has said he will quickly negotiate an end to the war if elected president. With Russia controlling nearly 20 percent of Ukrainian territory, any deal now would likely force Kyiv to make territorial concessions. And without a U.S. or NATO security guarantee, there would be no assurance that Putin wouldn't invade again.

Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate, backs aid to Ukraine but it is unclear how much further she is willing to go than her current boss, President Joe Biden. His administration has been criticized by Ukrainian supporters for slow-rolling military aid to Kyiv, giving it enough to survive but not enough to win.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy traveled to the White House last week to present his "victory plan" to Biden and request permission to strike military targets deep inside Russia with U.S. missiles. The White House did not announce any change in policy following the meeting.

The bipartisan report, led by Helsinki Commission Chairman Joe Wilson (Republican-South Carolina), can be seen as an exhortation for whichever party wins the presidency and controls the House of Representatives and Senate next year to continue aid.

Wilson is among those Republicans, including Senators Jim Risch of Idaho and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who are ardent Ukraine supporters.

Putin, who has been Russia's preeminent leader for nearly a quarter century, has tried to justify his invasion by claiming that Ukraine has historically belonged to Russia. At the same time, he is attempting to rebuild the Kremlin's sphere of influence in the former Soviet space. He has installed people in power in Russia that share his view to ensure his policies continue beyond his time in office.

"Until Russia can reckon with its imperial history and present, cease using repression and corruption as tools of power, and build governing institutions that are grounded in respect for democracy, human rights, and the rule of law, Russia cannot be a responsible international actor. We need to be prepared to contest Russia for the long term," the report said.

The 68-page report also covers other parts of Eurasia, from the Western Balkans to Central Asia.

Russia's war on Ukraine "has motivated Central Asian states to diversify their relations with other countries and seek alternate economic partners and security guarantees, as well as to strengthen regional cooperation," it said. "These changes offer an opportunity for the United States to increase its engagement in the region to counter Russian influence and to support the efforts of Central Asian states to realign their foreign relations."

With Moscow "determined to maintain its influence through both overt and covert means," the South Caucasus is "at a pivotal moment in its history, standing on the edge of both opportunity and peril," the report said.

The United States "must reassess its approach to the South Caucasus.... For decades, U.S. policy has been based on a relatively simple understanding: Armenia was seen as a stalwart Russian ally, Georgia as a committed pro-Western partner, and Azerbaijan as a multivector state balancing its relations between the West and Russia. However, recent developments have upended these assumptions, revealing a more complex and fluid geopolitical landscape."

The commission urged the United States to "adopt a comprehensive, sustained strategy that recognizes the Black Sea as a critical theater of competition. A long-term approach should prioritize building a credible deterrent to Russian aggression, supporting democratic governance and rule of law, and fostering regional cooperation frameworks that limit Russia's ability to exploit divisions and vulnerabilities."

In the Western Balkans, meanwhile, "Russia has preyed on internal divisions and flagging U.S. engagement to disrupt the region's integration into Western institutions, including NATO and the EU," it said. "The U.S. should target poisonous, Russia-affiliated actors in the region who engage in corrupt and destabilizing behavior while redoubling our support for regional security, stability, and energy independence."

Belarus Pressures Pardoned Political Prisoners, Rights Groups Say

Belarusian strongman Alyaksandr Lukashenka (file photo).
Belarusian strongman Alyaksandr Lukashenka (file photo).

Belarusian human rights activists accused the country's government on September 30 of pressuring political prisoners who have been pardoned by authoritarian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka and forcing them to cooperate with authorities. During the past three months, Lukashenka has pardoned 115 activists who were convicted for taking part in protests against his rule. Those pardoned were a small fraction of more than 1,300 political prisoners in Belarus, according to the Vyasna human rights center. They include the group’s founder and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ales Byalyatski. Vyasna and other rights groups, including BYSOL, said those amnestied were barred from leaving the country and forced to take part in propaganda videos.

Man Accused Of Attempting To Assassinate Trump Pleads Not Guilty

A photo from Kyiv's Independence Square in Kyiv in 2022 shows Ryan Wesley Routh sticking up national flags of the countries helping Ukraine.
A photo from Kyiv's Independence Square in Kyiv in 2022 shows Ryan Wesley Routh sticking up national flags of the countries helping Ukraine.

A man who authorities say spent 12 hours camped outside Donald Trump's golf course before the U.S. Secret Service spotted him with a rifle pleaded not guilty on September 30 to federal charges, including attempted assassination. Ryan Wesley Routh, who was known as an active supporter of Ukraine’s military in its defense against Russia’s invasion, appeared briefly in the federal court in West Palm Beach days after a grand jury handed down a five-count indictment stemming from what appears to have been the second attempt on Trump's life since July. Routh has been arrested over 100 times – many of which were because of traffic violations – and his travels to Ukraine and Taiwan show that he’s able slip across borders.

Updated

Israel Moves Closer To Ground Offensive In Lebanon, Despite Biden Opposition

Smoke plumes erupt after an Israeli air strike targeted the village of Khiam in southern Lebanon near the border with northern Israel on September 30.
Smoke plumes erupt after an Israeli air strike targeted the village of Khiam in southern Lebanon near the border with northern Israel on September 30.

Israel appeared to move closer to launching a ground offensive against Hezbollah militants in Lebanon, while U.S. President Joe Biden forcefully said he opposed such a move by the close U.S. ally, as events in the Middle East threatened to spin out of control.

"The next stage in the war against Hezbollah will begin soon," Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on September 30, as the U.S. State Department reported that Israeli special forces had launched small ground raids against Hezbollah and sealed off communities along its northern border.

"We will use all the means that may be required -- your forces, other forces, from the air, from the sea, and on land," Gallant told his troops.

"The elimination of [Hezbollah leader Hassan] Nasrallah is an important step, but it is not the final one."

Israel killed longtime nemesis Nasrallah on September 27 as it launched a series of massive air strikes in and around Beirut and southern Lebanon that has also claimed the lives of multiple Hezbollah leaders and other members of sanctioned militant groups.

Hezbollah is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, while the European Union blacklists its armed wing but not its political party. Hezbollah’s political party has seats in the Lebanese parliament.

In a televised address, Naim Qassem, deputy director of Hezbollah -- an Iran-backed militant group and political party that controls much of southern Lebanon -- claimed that his fighters were "ready if Israel decides to enter by land."

A Lebanese official told the AFP news agency that Lebanon had moved the soldiers of its small national army from regions near the Israeli border to avoid any conflict in the event of a ground offensive by Tel Aviv.

Meanwhile, when asked whether he was comfortable with Israel launching a ground operation in Lebanon, Biden told reporters that “I'm comfortable with them stopping. We should have a cease-fire now.”

Later, as tensions mounted, the White House said in a statement that Washington believes the way to get an Israel-Lebanon cease-fire is to have a diplomatic resolution.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot, speaking from Beirut, also urged Israel "to refrain from any ground incursion and to cease fire." He also called on Hezbollah "to do the same and to refrain from any action likely to lead to regional destabilization."

Israeli attacks in Lebanon and in Yemen against Iran-backed Huthi rebels and claims by Tehran-allied Hezbollah militants that they had fired into Israel with its new "nour missile" – which observers say might be a ballistic missile – led to increased fears on September 30 that there could be an all-out war in the Middle East.

Late on September 30, an Israeli air strike hit Beirut's southern suburbs, creating large explosions after Israel's military had warned civilians to leave three specific buildings that would be targeted in the densely populated neighborhood.

Separately, Iran said it will not deploy forces to Lebanon or the Gaza Strip to fight Israel amid the intensified attacks against the Hezbollah in Lebanon.

"There is no need to send extra or volunteer forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran," Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said on September 30, saying Lebanon and fighters in the Palestinian territories "have the capability and strength to defend themselves against the aggression."

Kanani's statement came as Qassem said in a video message that a replacement for Nasrallah will be chosen "sooner, rather than later."

In the message, he said the selection will be made within the regular mechanisms of Hezbollah. He gave no further details.

Nasrallah was killed last week in an Israeli air strike on the southern command center of Hezbollah.


Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian visited the Hezbollah office in Tehran on September 30 "to pay tribute" to Nasrallah, according to the government's website.

Israel's air strikes continued on September 30, including a hit on central Beirut, the first in nearly a year of escalating conflict with Hezbollah, that began after another Iran-supported group designated as a terrorist organization, Hamas, launched an operation into Israel that killed some 1,200 people, with another 250 taken hostage back to the Gaza Strip.

Israel's military has also widened its attacks on Iran-backed militant groups, striking the Yemeni port city of Hodeida, which is held by Tehran-allied Huthi rebels, even as it intensified air strikes on Hezbollah strongholds in southern Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon.

The losses suffered by Hezbollah appear to be the heaviest since Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps helped create the militant group in 1982 to blunt an Israeli invasion of Lebanon.

Nasrallah joined Hezbollah to fight in that conflict, and in 1992 became its leader, building the group into Lebanon's most powerful military and political force.

With reporting by Reuters and AFP

Navalny May Have Been Poisoned To Death In Prison, Investigative Group Says

People lay flowers at the grave of Russian opposition politician Aleksei Navalny following his funeral at the Borisovskoye cemetery in Moscow on March 1.
People lay flowers at the grave of Russian opposition politician Aleksei Navalny following his funeral at the Borisovskoye cemetery in Moscow on March 1.

Russian opposition politician and outspoken Kremlin critic Aleksei Navalny, who died in prison in February, might have been poisoned, the Insider investigative group said, citing official documents that appear to have been edited to conform with the state's contention he died from cardiac issues.

According to a report by the Insider, published on September 29, the group obtained two variants of official documents on the decision not to launch a probe into Navalny's death in February in the remote Polar Wolf prison in the Arctic district of Yamalo-Nenets where he was serving a lengthy sentence on what he and his supporters said were politically motivated charges.

Both documents were issued on July 26, 2024, and the text in one, the Insider said, appears to have been amended and now complies with the official explanation for the anti-corruption crusader's death.

Navalny's widow, Yulia Navalnaya, has said that her husband "in the last minutes of his life, complained of having a sharp pain in his stomach," while Navalny's associates have said he was killed in prison most likely on the Kremlin's command, which the Kremlin has vehemently denied.

One of the documents -- most likely to have been initially issued according to the Insider -- says that on February 16 Navalny "started complaining about sharp pains in his abdomen area, an impulsive rejection of his stomach's contents started, he began having convulsions and lost consciousness."

A second, apparently edited document, does not list the symptoms described in the initial document.

Video Profile: A Look Back At Aleksei Navalny's Biggest Battles
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The official autopsy report said that hypertension and other diseases caused a heartbeat disorder which led to Navalny's death.

"The official cause of death -- heart rhythm disturbance -- would not explain the symptoms we see in the (first) report: sharp abdominal pain, vomiting and convulsions. It is unlikely that such symptoms can be explained by anything other than poisoning," according to resuscitation specialist Aleksandr Polupan, who treated Navalny in an Omsk hospital after he was poisoned with a Novichok-style nerve agent in 2020.

"The short time interval between the abdominal pain and convulsions suggests that it could have been, for example, an organophosphorus substance (a class of substances that Novichok belongs to), but only if it was applied internally, not topically," he added, which other doctors from various medical specialties interviewed by The Insider agreed with.

In 2020, Navalny was poisoned with a Novichok-like nerve agent but survived after he was airlifted to Germany and treated there. Navalny accused President Vladimir Putin of ordering his poisoning then, but the Kremlin has denied that.

The Insider did not specify how and from whom its journalists had obtained the documents.

Russian officials have yet to comment on the report.

After Navalny's death, officials refused to hand the body over to his mother for more than a week, prompting accusations from his supporters that officials were trying to hide evidence of his murder.

Controversy has continued to swirl with Navalny's former associate Ivan Zhdanov saying on September 3 that the refusal by the prosecutor's office in the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District to launch a probe into Navalny's death was illegal.

The district’s authorities said at the time of death that a probe had been launched, though there was never a report and no findings were released.

The Insider said "other facts" also support the use of a toxic substance in Navalny's death.

"The authorities did not release the body for a long time and did not allow an alternative examination of the biomaterials. However, only now has the fact of poisoning been documented," it said.

Moscow Court Hands Life Sentence To Man For Attempted Murder Of Pro-Kremlin Writer

Pro-Kremlin Russian writer and propagandist Zakhar Prilepin was wounded in a car bombing in the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod on May 6 last year.
Pro-Kremlin Russian writer and propagandist Zakhar Prilepin was wounded in a car bombing in the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod on May 6 last year.

A Moscow court on September 30 sentenced a man to life in prison after finding him guilty of attempting to murder pro-Kremlin writer and political activist Zakhar Prilepin. The Second Western Military District Court ruled that Aleksandr Permyakov will serve the first five years of his term in a cell-like penitentiary and the rest of his term in a special regime prison. Permyakov was also ordered to pay 700,000 rubles ($7,600) fine. Prilepin was wounded in a car bombing in the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod on May 6 last year. His driver died in the explosion, while Prilepin sustained unspecified injuries. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Updated

Exiled Belarus Opposition Hails Lithuanian Appeal To ICC On Lukashenka

Exiled Belarusian opposition leader Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya heads a meeting of the United Transitional Cabinet from Warsaw in July.
Exiled Belarusian opposition leader Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya heads a meeting of the United Transitional Cabinet from Warsaw in July.

Belarus's opposition in exile has welcomed Lithuania's plan to ask the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate alleged crimes against humanity by Aleksandr Lukashenka's regime, saying the process could bring international accountability and hope to Lukashenka's victims.

Lithuania's Justice Ministry announced on September 30 that it was referring the "situation in Belarus" to the ICC, listing a litany of alleged crimes against the population by the regime that include persecution, deportations, torture, and "other inhumane acts."

"We are grateful to the Lithuanian government for the principled decision and action," the United Transitional Cabinet, an exile opposition group formed in 2022 and led by former presidential challenger Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya, said in a statement.

"For hundreds of thousands of victims, for all victims of repression, this gives hope. Hope for justice, hope that crimes will not go unpunished."

The ICC confirmed that it received Lithuania’s referral and said it would “examine the request within” and to determine “if there is a reasonable basis to proceed with the opening of an investigation.“

Tsikhanouskaya, who fled to Lithuania amid a brutal crackdown after the disputed 2020 presidential election claimed by Lukashenka, added, "The guilty should be brought to international responsibility, the repression should be stopped."

Lukashenka's forces jailed and intimidated the opposition and sympathizers and are thought to have jailed thousands of Belarusians amid the ongoing clampdown on dissent.

Western governments have refused to recognize Lukashenka's authority, and the former communist-era leader has increasingly relied on Russian President Vladimir Putin to keep his tight grip on power in his country of 9 million.

In its appeal to the ICC, Vilnius accuses Lukashenka's regime of a campaign that includes: "serious deprivation of fundamental rights; arbitrary detention, prosecution, and conviction; serious unlawful violence; unlawful killings; sexual violence; physical and mental harm; torture, inhuman and degrading treatment; intimidation and harassment; forced labour; and enforced disappearance among several others."

Lithuania has been a leader in the pursuit of international justice and accountability stemming from Russia's all-out invasion of Ukraine with Minsk's help, from the ICC to appeals to Eurjust and Kyiv's genocide case against Moscow before the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

A request by Vilnius in 2022 prompted the ICC to open proceedings over Russia and Belarus's aggression against Ukraine.

The ICC has since issued multiple warrants, including against Russian President Vladimir Putin and his commissioner for children's rights, as well as Russian military commanders and others.

Signatories to the ICC's founding treaty, the Rome Statute, are bound to detain suspects for whom the court has issued an arrest warrant if they set foot on their soil, but the court has no enforcement mechanism.

Rights groups have previously urged the ICC to investigate Belarus and Russia over the fate of Ukrainian children they say have been forcibly taken to Belarus during Russia's 31-month-old full-scale invasion and are being "reeducated" to turn against their homeland.

"Belarusian democratic forces call on the countries participating in the Rome Statute to support the efforts of the Lithuanian side and the common aspiration of all Belarusians -- to ensure justice for hundreds of thousands of victims and bring Lukashenka and his accomplices to justice for the crimes he committed and continues to commit," the United Transitional Cabinet said.

Taliban Arrests Suspects In Deaths Of 3 Foreign Tourists

Taliban security forces in 2022
Taliban security forces in 2022

Afghanistan's Taliban-led government has announced the arrest of several alleged members of a regional branch of Islamic State who are suspected of killing three foreign tourists in Bamiyan in May and involvement in a mid-September attack on compliance officials in Kabul.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said on X on September 30 that the unspecified number of suspected Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) members includes one Tajik national.

He alleged that the Tajik national had come from neighboring Pakistan to carry out attacks in Afghanistan and said other IS-K fighters are in hiding in the Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces of Pakistan with support from certain intelligence agencies. He did not provide evidence.

Islamabad has rejected past accusations that it provides shelter to militants.

Mujahid added that Taliban operations had forced IS-K militants out of Afghanistan, their former base.

The September 12 attack on employees of the High Directorate of Supervision and Prosecution of Decrees and Edicts -- which took over duties from the former UN-backed government's attorney-general's office -- resulted in six deaths and 13 injuries, according to the Taliban.

The Afghan Prosecutors Association said at least 16 prosecutors were killed.

The May 17 attack on a group of tourists at a market in the central Bamiyan Province killed three foreigners and an Afghan, and injured seven others, according to Taliban officials at the time.

An anonymous Taliban source, however, put the number of dead at eight in comments to RFE/RL's Radio Azadi. Radio Azadi could not confirm that account.

Spain later confirmed that some of its nationals had been "murdered" in the attack, and simultaneous reports cited injured citizens from Australia, Norway, and Lithuania.

Four suspects were said to have been detained at the scene.

Bamiyan has remained a tourist destination despite a previous Taliban leadership's destruction in 2001 of two massive sixth-century Buddha statues to prosecute the hard-line fundamentalist group's extreme ban on idolatry.

Afghan Journalists' Group Slams 10-Year Sentences Given To Reporters

Afghan journalists in Kabul in 2021
Afghan journalists in Kabul in 2021

The Afghanistan Journalists' Support Organization (AJSO) has expressed concern at the 10-year prison sentences reportedly given to two reporters by a Taliban military court after their arrest in Kabul two months ago. The AJSO, a support nonprofit established by media professionals and German academics, said the court sentenced Mohammad Arif Hijran and Ahmed Kamran to prison immediately after their detention on July 16. It said they were convicted of reporting on and taking photographs of ceremonies to mark Ashura, an Islamic day of commemoration. The AJSO condemned the sentences and called on the international community to put pressure on Afghanistan's Taliban-led government to release the men. Government officials have not commented on the claims. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Radio Azadi, click here.

Updated

72-Year-Old U.S. Citizen Pleads Guilty In Moscow To Fighting For Ukraine

The Moscow City Court (file photo)
The Moscow City Court (file photo)

Stephen Hubbard, a 72-year-old U.S. citizen, has pleaded guilty in a Moscow court to charges of mercenary activity for receiving money to fight for Ukraine against invading Russian forces, Russian state-run media reported, which his family members immediately questioned.

"Yes, I agree with the indictment," the RIA Novosti news agency quoted Hubbard as saying in the courtroom during the hearing on September 30.

Prosecutors have alleged that Hubbard signed a contract with a Ukrainian territorial defense unit in the town of Izyum as Russia launched its ongoing invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The prosecution said Hubbard agreed to fight for Ukraine for $1,000 a month and allegedly received training, weapons, and ammunition.

Hubbard was detained by Russian soldiers on April 2, 2022.

The U.S. Embassy in Moscow has not commented on the situation due to what it called privacy restrictions.

Last week, the same court placed Hubbard, a native of Michigan, in pretrial detention until at least March 26, 2025.

Hubbard's previous pretrial restrictions remain unknown as there were no reports or official statements about his arrest or how he ended up in Moscow.

Hubbard's sister, Patricia Fox, and another relative expressed doubts on the man's reported confession, telling Reuters that he was pro-Russian and could not take up arms to fight against Russians, especially at his age.

"He is so nonmilitary. He never had a gun, owned a gun, done any of that...He's more of a pacifist," Patricia Fox told Reuters by phone, adding that she talked to her brother last time in September 2021.

Fox confirmed earlier reports by Russian media, saying that Hubbard moved to Ukraine in 2014 and lived there for a time with a Ukrainian woman. She added that Hubbard split with his girlfriend and moved to the town of Izyum in Ukraine's eastern region of Kharkiv, where he stayed alone.

Fox also said that in late May 2022, three months after Russia launched its ongoing full-scale aggression against Ukraine, she saw a video distributed by a YouTube channel with just over 100 subscribers, on which she recognized her brother, saying he witnessed Ukrainian armed forces "shelling Izyum for propaganda purposes and to create panic among local residents."

In the video, Hubbard answers questions by a person not seen on camera, saying that he understands why Russian President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine and expresses hope that the war will end soon.

It was not clear in what circumstances and where the video was taken.

Moscow has been accused of targeting U.S. citizens by detaining them on trumped-up charges to later use as bargaining chips in talks to bring back Russians convicted of crimes in the United States and other Western nations.

At least 10 U.S. citizens, including Hubbard, remain behind bars in Russia after a prisoner swap on August 1 involving 16 people that Moscow agreed to free in exchange for eight Russians convicted of crimes and serving prison terms in the United States and Europe.

U.S. citizens RFE/RL journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, and former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan were among those released by Russia.

With reporting by RIA Novosti and Reuters
Updated

Zelenskiy Stresses Need For Battlefield Gains Ahead Of Next Ramstein Meeting

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (file photo)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (file photo)

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy once again acknowledged the "very, very difficult” situation his military is facing after his air defenses were forced to destroy multiple waves of Russian drones targeting the capital, while his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, used a state holiday to repeat a pledge to achieve his aims in Ukraine.

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.

Following a meeting on September 30 with top commanders, Zelenskiy said that "reports on each of our frontline sectors, our capabilities, our future capabilities and our specific tasks: The situation is very, very difficult.

“Everything that can be done this autumn, everything that we can achieve must be achieved," he said in his nightly video address.

Zelenskiy stressed the importance of the upcoming Ukraine Defense Contract Meeting at the U.S. Ramstein Air Base in Germany and stressed the need to make gains ahead of the gathering to assure Western allies of Ukraine’s ability to make battlefield gains.

“It depends on everyone in the Ukrainian team. Now we have to work as hard as we can before Ramstein,” he added, referring to the scheduled October 12 meeting.

On the battlefield, Serhiy Popko, the head of the military administration in Kyiv, said there had been no damage after "waves" of incoming attack drones were destroyed over the course of a five-hour air alert in the city that began around 1 a.m. local time on September 30. It was the 10th Russian air attack on the Ukrainian capital this month.

The Kyiv regionwide military administration commander, Ruslan Kravchenko, said later that debris from destroyed drones fell in six districts but caused no casualties and only minor damage.

Ukrainian military authorities said four people had died and 37 more had been injured by Russian air strikes over the past 24 hours in the Donetsk, Kherson, Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, and Zaporizhzhya regions.

They said Russia launched 73 attack drones and three missiles overnight in all, and that Ukrainian air defenses downed 67 of the drones and one of the missiles.

In Russia, Putin vowed to achieve his goals in Ukraine in a September 30 video message to coincide with the anniversary of his unilateral declaration in 2022 purporting to annex four Ukrainian regions partly controlled by Russian troops.

The United Nations has passed multiple resolutions confirming Ukraine's territory and sovereignty since Russia invaded and annexed Crimea in 2014 and launched its support of separatists in eastern Ukraine eight years before the full-scale invasion began in February 2022.

Ukrainian Woman Rescued After Russian Bombing
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"The truth is on our side," Putin said in the message. "All goals set will be achieved."

The Russian government on September 30 announced plans to increase defense spending by some 30 percent in 2025 as the long war in Ukraine -- initially anticipated by the Kremlin to be a short, swift, and victorious invasion -- has dragged on for 31 months.

A draft budget indicated that Russia plans to raise defense spending next year to 13.5 trillion rubles ($145 billion), diverting more resources to the war in Ukraine even as the country’s economy continues to stagger in the face of Western sanctions.

Putin also signed a decree on a regular fall recruitment of males for mandatory military service, with some 133,000 men aged 18-30 expected to join Russia’s forces. Putin has been reluctant to announce extra, irregular mobilizations, fearing a mass exodus of men to other countries similar to what happened following his decree in September 2022 in the early months of the war.

Unprecedented Western military and other support for Ukraine has continued despite fears of "Ukraine fatigue" among backers and Moscow's persistent efforts to undermine European unity.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha traveled on September 30 to Budapest to attempt to bolster support in Hungary, which despite being a NATO and EU member, has been reluctant to back Ukraine’s war against Russia.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is the only EU leader to have maintained close ties with Putin following Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022 and has not provided military assistance.

During a news conference, Sybiha pushed back on remarks by counterpart Peter Szijjarto, who stated Hungary would support any initiative that would achieve peace in Ukraine, a worrisome stance for Kyiv, which has flatly rejected any initiatives by Moscow that would require it to surrender sovereign territory to Russia.

Sybiha said he hoped Budapest would continue to support "Ukrainian initiatives," which hold that Russia must remove all troops from Ukraine.

Ukrainian defenders have prevented Russian forces from fully capturing the four regions in Putin's September 2022 annexation declaration: Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhya.

In August, Ukrainian troops launched a cross-border incursion into Russia's western Kursk region in what Kyiv has said is an effort to gain a better foothold for peace talks and to bring the war home to Russians.

After the initial wave of drone attacks on September 30, air defense forces were against put into action in the Kyiv region shortly before 9 a.m.

The Ukrainian military administrator in the southern port city of Kherson said Russia appears to have been targeting critical infrastructure there overnight, damaging a gas pipeline, an administrative building, and residential buildings.

Kickl's Far-Right Freedom Party Wins Historic Austrian Vote

Freedom Party leader Herbert Kickl talks to supporters in Vienna late on September 29, as vote projections showed his party winning Austria's general election.
Freedom Party leader Herbert Kickl talks to supporters in Vienna late on September 29, as vote projections showed his party winning Austria's general election.

VIENNA -- The anti-immigrant Freedom Party has outperformed polls to win national elections in Austria in a historic showing that underscores far-right gains in Europe but could still leave it in opposition with more mainstream parties battling to keep it out of government.

Supporters on election night in the Austrian capital cheered the Freedom Party’s 29 percent support from the country's 6 million eligible voters, placing it nearly three percentage points ahead of Prime Minister Karl Nehammer’s ruling People’s Party at 26.5 percent and eight points ahead of the opposition Social Democrats at 21 percent.

"Now it's time for a change, in my opinion," Lorenz, a social worker, told RFE/RL in Vienna after ballots were cast on September 29. "And I wish to act more nationally. Because the EU....yeah, we got so many illegal immigrants and that's a problem."

But no single party will hold a majority in the the 183-seat lower house of parliament, the National Council, and talks to form a government are likely to drag out for weeks or months.

'It's A Sad Day': Austrian Opposition Reacts To Far-Right Election Victory
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Most major parties have vowed to avoid any coalition with the Freedom Party, which became the first far-right party to win an Austrian election since World War II.

Nehammer has specified that his conservative People's Party won't bring the Freedom Party's fiery 55-year-old leader Herbert Kickl into government, but he hasn't ruled out a deal to govern alongside it.

Despite the party's leading spot in polls for most of the past two years, Kickl remains among the country's least popular national politicians.

The Freedom Party's Fortress Austria, Fortress Of Freedom platform also contains a number of perceived pro-business steps that could roughly align with the People's Party, which has governed in coalition with the Greens since 2020.

President Alexander Van der Bellen, a former Greens party member who has expressed misgivings publicly about the Freedom Party, grants the mandate to form the next government.

Van der Bellen said after results were announced that he would ensure any government adheres to the "foundations of our liberal democracy."

Critics of the Freedom Party accuse it of xenophobia, racism, and anti-Semitism, and say its nationalist and anti-Muslim proposals undermine social cohesion.

They say its Euroskepticism threatens Austria's outsized role in the European Union and its pro-Moscow bias endangers the West's efforts to help Ukraine fight off Russia's unprovoked invasion.

The Freedom Party was formed in the 1950s by former Nazis, and it has promised to roll back asylum and immigration policies, including "remigrating" foreigners out of the country and ending reunification policies with immigrants already in Austria.

"I'm sad and I'm disappointed, because it's not a good sign that the far-right party has such good results," Karin, a teacher, told RFE/RL in Vienna late on election night. "It's not good for democracy, it's not good for the country, it's not good for Europe."

Detailed vote tallies are likely to paint a picture of rural voters powering a good deal of the Freedom Party's success.

Stepan, a waiter and student, told RFE/RL in Vienna that he wished the People's Party had fared better in the vote.

"I think in Austria we have a big difference between countryside and cities in the votes," he said. "And yes, the countryside this time won somehow."

The Freedom Party and many of its right-wing populist counterparts surging in European popularity have resisted support for the defense of Ukraine and sanctions that target Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

The Freedom Party victory comes after Dutch elections last November saw Geert Wilders' far-right Party for Freedom score a surprise victory that also marked a postwar first.

That was followed by major gains for right-wing populist parties in national elections to the European Parliament in June.

Then the political left and center were forced to cooperate to ultimately deny Marine Le Pen’s hard-right National Rally a victory after a first-round surge in French snap elections called by President Emmanuel Macron.

In Germany this month, the far-right, anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany made major gains in state voting.

Pakistani Police, Pro-Hezbollah Protesters Clash In Karachi

Protesters Angered By Nasrallah's Death Clash With Pakistani Police
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Police and pro-Hezbollah protesters clashed in the streets of Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi, after demonstrators attempted to access the U.S. Consulate on September 29. Police fired tear gas after protesters threw stones and attempted to cross barriers. The Shi'ite Muslim-led protesters were angered by the Israeli killing of Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Iran-backed Hezbollah militants in Lebanon two days earlier. Police said 17 people were injured in clashes. Organizers told RFE/RL about 20 protesters had been arrested. The United States, a close ally of Israel, has designated Hezbollah as a terrorist organization. Pakistan condemned Israel's attacks in Lebanon, saying they showed "disregard for international law." To read the original story by RFE/RL’s Radio Mashaal, click here.

Russian PM Mishustin To Travel To Iran For Meeting With Pezeshkian

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin (file photo)
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin (file photo)

Amid growing tensions in the Middle East, the Kremlin announced that Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin will travel to Tehran to meet with Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian on September 30. Moscow has expressed vocal condemnation of Israel's attacks on Iran-backed Hezbollah militants in Lebanon. Western governments have accused Tehran of providing Russia with weapons, particularly deadly drones, to use in its war against Ukraine. Despite holding the title of prime minister, Mishustin has little actual power in a Russia dominated by President Vladimir Putin, although the trip could be viewed by some as a show of support for Iran amid rising Middle East tensions. The Kremlin also said Mishustin will attend a meeting of the Eurasian Economic Forum in Yerevan on October 1. The group consists of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan. and Russia.

7 Shot Dead In Pakistan's Balochistan

A street protest in Pakistan's Balochistan Province, a region hit by unrest and an insurgency. (file photo)
A street protest in Pakistan's Balochistan Province, a region hit by unrest and an insurgency. (file photo)

Seven people were shot dead on September 28 in Pakistan’s southwestern region of Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran and is home to the country’s Baluch ethnic minority. Officials said the victims were laborers from Punjab Province. Poverty-ridden Balochistan has been the scene of a low-level insurgency and brutal army crackdown for years, which has led to massive street protests in the region. No group claimed responsibility for the attack. A radical group known as the Baloch Liberation Army has waged an insurgency for decades against the Pakistani state, carrying out mostly small-scale attacks against government forces and others from outside the region, often targeting the Punjabi community. To read the original story by RFE/RL’s Radio Mashaal, click here.

Romania On Red Alert Again Over Flooding Threat

Romanians brace against the rain as authorities put areas of the country on high flood alert and ordered some evacuations on September 29, less than three weeks after deadly flooding.
Romanians brace against the rain as authorities put areas of the country on high flood alert and ordered some evacuations on September 29, less than three weeks after deadly flooding.

Romanian water-management authorities put two eastern regions on the highest flood alert and ordered evacuations, and put the rest of the country on elevated watch as heavy rain and winds approached on September 29.

Officials warned that risks were increased due to clogged waterways and other damage from deadly floodwaters that hit Romania and much of Central Europe earlier this month as Storm Boris inundated low-lying areas.

Romania's northeastern Galati and Vaslui counties on the Danube River were again major areas of concern as the new storms were predicted for this week, with red alerts called for those two counties and along the Barlad, Prut, and Siret rivers.

The National Institute of Hydrology and Water Management (INHGA) alerts are to remain in effect until early on October 1.

"No one stays in the risk areas," the Galati city council announced. "All mayors who have risk areas must evacuate people there. We must not have any more loss of human lives."

The council ordered that schools and other buildings outside at-risk areas be prepared to accommodate evacuees.

"The situation is worse than last time," said Costel Fotea, president of the Galati County council. "The waterways are clogged in many areas, the ditches have not been completely unclogged, and the amounts of water announced by the meteorologists are very high."

Meteorologists predicted the most intense rainfall would hit on September 29.

The flooding from Storm Boris killed six people in Galati and damaged thousands of homes there.

Twenty more people were killed in all, including in the Czech Republic, Poland, and elsewhere.

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