Navalny's team promised 20 thousand euros to law enforcers: in exchange they demand information
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Allies of Alexei Navalny promise a reward of 20 thousand euros and are ready to assist in the evacuation from Russia to security forces for information about the death of the oppositionist.
Earlier, the politician's press secretary, Kira Yarmysh, said that the opposition activist's mother was again threatened by an investigator. She was offered to agree to a secret funeral without the possibility of a public farewell within three hours.
"An investigator called Alexei's mother an hour ago and gave her an ultimatum: either she agrees to a secret funeral without a public farewell within 3 hours, or Alexei will be buried in the colony. She refused to negotiate with the IC because they have no authority to decide how and where to bury her son," Yarmish wrote.
Lyudmila Navalnaya said earlier that investigator Alexander Varapaev threatened to "do something with her son's body". She claims that the Investigative Committee officers plan to bury Alexei secretly and then reveal his burial site to her. Navalnaya quotes investigator Varapaev as telling her: "Time is not working for you, the corpse is decomposing."
Memorial to the fallen Moldovan soldiers of the Transnistrian War in Chisinau. Photo: Alexander Moisseenko
Thirty-three years ago, a ceasefire brought an end to the Transnistrian War—sometimes described by locals as the Russian-Moldovan War. Although the tensions officially ended in 1992, its consequences continue to shape Moldovan politics, society, and security — especially in view of the upcoming parliamentary elections.
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.
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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