Lithuanian presidential candidate Giedrimas Jeglinskas said he had become a victim of Belarusian propagandists after an interview appeared on one of the websites, which he claims he would never have given.
"I was officially approached for an interview by the opposition Russian portal Meduza, after which suddenly the interview was placed on a Belarusian propaganda channel with all sorts of 'vatnic' embellishments," the candidate said.
A screenshot from the interview
He said that the content of the interview did not bother him, but getting to the propagandists was unpleasant.
"My advice to all my colleagues is to assess very responsibly whether it is worth commenting on something even to opposition channels," Eglinskas wrote.
The Delfi editorial board contacted Meduza editor-in-chief Ivan Kolpakov, who said that the media outlet had nothing to do with the letter Jeglinskas received.
Finland is moving to withdraw from the Ottawa Convention, which bans anti-personnel mines. Prime Minister Petteri Orpo said the decision comes as a direct response to growing aggression from Russia.
The ruling Georgian Dream party has approved a set of controversial laws, including a “foreign agent” act aimed at NGOs and media. Critics say it mimics the U.S. FARA but is weaponized against dissent.
A long-feared megaquake off Japan’s Pacific coast could cause up to $1.81 trillion in damage and kill nearly 300,000 people, according to a new government report.
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The Russian capital faced one of the largest terrorist attacks in its history. The terrorist attack at Crocus City Hall, which claimed the lives of many innocent people, was the second largest after the Beslan tragedy. But unlike previous attacks, this incident is shrouded in a layer of contradictory facts and ambiguities that point to possible miscalculations by the Russian security services