Defense Minister Says 90 Percent Of Moldova's Military Equipment Is Outdated

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Defense Minister Says 90 Percent Of Moldova's Military Equipment Is Outdated

Moldova's armed forces consists of 6,500 professional personnel, while 2,000 conscripts are being recruited annually for compulsory military service.
Moldova's armed forces consists of 6,500 professional personnel, while 2,000 conscripts are being recruited annually for compulsory military service.

A large part of Moldova's military equipment dates back to Soviet times and is in urgent need of replacement, Defense Minister Anatolie Nosatii told RFE/RL, adding that the money allocated by the government for defense amounts to a small sum but is still important for its badly underfunded and underequipped army.

Moldova, one of Europe's poorest countries, was part of the Soviet Union until 1991, when it declared independence. It has a long border with Ukraine and has been hosting hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian refugees since the start of Moscow's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

Russia has some 1,500 troops in Moldova's Moscow-backed separatist region of Transdniester, a sliver of land sandwiched between Moldova proper and Ukraine.

"Some 90 percent [of our military equipment] is of Soviet origin and dates back to the 1960s to the 1980s.... You cannot modernize a ZIL-131 [military truck] or an antiaircraft system made in the 1970s," Nosatii said.

Moldovan Defense Minister Anatolie Nosatii
Moldovan Defense Minister Anatolie Nosatii

The pro-European government of President Maia Sandu accelerated its EU bid after Russia invaded Ukraine and in June was given candidate status alongside Ukraine.

Moldova's armed forces consists of 6,500 professional personnel, while 2,000 conscripts are being recruited annually for compulsory military service. The military also employs 2,000 civilians as auxiliary personnel.

Nosatii told RFE/RL that the 0.5 percent of the gross domestic product allocated for defense by the government -- roughly $25.5 million -- while small, is still very important for the implementation of modernization projects.

Nosatii also spoke about the equipment shortages that the Moldovan military faces because of insufficient funding.

The Defense Ministry covers only partially the contents of the so-called "emergency backpack" that contract soldiers, who account for the bulk of Moldova's armed forces, must have at the ready for unexpected situations, Nosatii said.

Nosatii, who was appointed in August last year as defense minister in Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita's reformist government, told RFE/RL that his ministry's current priority is to provide every member of the armed forces with one of these individual first-aid medical kits.

Moldova has been cooperating with foreign partners, including NATO, in its efforts to supply the first-aid kits to its military personnel, Nosatii said.

Besides the first-aid kit, the emergency backpack must also include personal items such as underwear, socks, gloves, a woolly hat, food, and a flashlight, Nosatii said, adding that the state can only partially cover the cost of such equipment.

"For example," Nosatii told RFE/RL, "if the state provides four T-shirts [for daily usage] but the backpack has to cover seven days of deployment, the remainder of three or more T-shirts must be bought by the soldier."

Nosatii said that supplying Moldova's small military with equipment has been a permanent underlying problem but that the ministry has obtained aid from Moldova's external partners.

"You can't demand that a soldier perform his duties when he doesn't have what he needs, when he's cold, lacks military equipment, or is forced to buy it himself," Nosatii said.

Military equipment donated by Moldova's Western partners this year consists of protective gear such as helmets, flak jackets, and waterproof and winter clothing.

Earlier this month, German Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht visited Moldova and said Berlin is prepared to provide drones and other military equipment to Chisinau.

Lambrecht also said the German Army is ready to provide military training to Moldova.

She said Berlin also realizes the importance of supporting Moldova in the wake of energy shortages stemming from the war in Ukraine.

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Bosnia Protests To Montenegro Over 'Two States' Reference To Bosnian Serb Entity

Montenegrin parliament speaker Andrija Mandic (right) attends the All-Serb Assembly in Belgrade on June 8.
Montenegrin parliament speaker Andrija Mandic (right) attends the All-Serb Assembly in Belgrade on June 8.

SARAJEVO -- Bosnia-Herzegovina's Foreign Ministry has sent a protest note to Montenegro over what it called "controversial statements" by the right-wing speaker of the country's parliament implying statehood for Republika Srpska, the mostly Serb entity that makes up about half of Bosnia.

Speaker Andrija Mandic referred to an "All-Serb Assembly" in Belgrade on June 8 attended by the leadership of Republika Srpska as "a gathering of two states."

The Bosnian Serbs' leadership has repeatedly threatened to break away from the rest of Bosnia and has taken steps in the past two years to establish key parallel institutions.

"Even though we know him, even though he constantly behaves like this, we will always respond to attempts to attack the constitutional architecture of Bosnia-Herzegovina," Bosnian Foreign Minister Ellmedin Konakovic said.

He said Bosnian officials were considering sending a note of protest to Serbia as well.

The June 8 assembly in Belgrade was organized under the slogan "One people, one assembly -- Serbia and Srpska."

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic shows a Serbian flag during the "All-Serb Assembly" in Belgrade on June 8.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic shows a Serbian flag during the "All-Serb Assembly" in Belgrade on June 8.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic has kept a number of its post-Yugoslav neighbors with Serbian minorities off-balance with appeals to Serbian ethnicity and nationhood as well as Christian Orthodoxy.

Pro-Moscow Republika Srpska President Milorad Dodik, accused of corruption and targeted by Western sanctions over his moves toward secession, has wielded mostly unrivaled power among Bosnian Serbs for decades and actively undermined Bosnian statehood.

Bosnia was admitted as a member of the United Nations in May 1992.

The constitution of Bosnia -- comprising Republika Srpska and the Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina, along with the self-governing Brcko District -- arose from the Dayton agreement that ended the Bosnian War in 1995.

Montenegro declared independence from its State Union with Serbia following a referendum in May 2006 and has grappled with identity issues stemming from its close historical, religious, and ethno-national ties with Serbs.

Among other assertions, its participants described Kosovo -- a partially recognized state that declared independence from Serbia in 2008 -- as "an inalienable part of Serbia."

U.S. officials have called the "All-Serb Assembly" assertions an attack on Bosnia's postwar institutions.

One Detained As Anti-Government Protesters Block Roads In Armenian Capital

Anti-government protesters gather on a main road in downtown Yerevan where police were guarding access to Armenia's parliament on June 10.
Anti-government protesters gather on a main road in downtown Yerevan where police were guarding access to Armenia's parliament on June 10.

Participants in a two-month-old, civil-disobedience campaign demanding the resignation of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian over territorial concessions to archfoe Azerbaijan blocked streets in downtown Yerevan early on June 11.

Police said they had detained one activist for failing to comply with an order early on the second day of four days of nonstop protests called by Archbishop Bagrat Galstanian in his bid to unseat and replace Pashinian.

The outspoken 53-year-old head of the Tavush Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church has attracted tens of thousands of demonstrators with his Tavush for the Motherland movement in an unprecedented challenge to Pashinian's six-year leadership.

Pashinian's Civil Contract party has a two-thirds majority in parliament that has helped insulate his government from public anger since a lightning offensive by Azerbaijan in September 2023 retook full control of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had been controlled by ethnic Armenians with Yerevan's support for decades.

Pashinian insists that having a demarcated border provides an assurance against further conflict between the Caucasus neighbors.

A two-day-old protest encampment blocking a main avenue outside the National Assembly was mostly quiet on June 11, with small groups of protesters gathering alongside a dozen or so tents.

Galstanian's movement has also held rallies in other towns and cities since launching a defiant march from the village of Kirants in May.

Kirants is one of four abandoned villages formally handed over by Armenia this month that used to be part of Soviet Azerbaijan but which came under Armenian control in the early 1990s during the first Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

The demarcation altered the boundary in a way that affects the infrastructure of a number of Armenian border villages, a problem the government has pledged to fix within weeks.

EU Commission Seeks To Allow Ukrainian Refugees To Stay Until March 2026

Refugees from Ukraine stop at the reception desk at an aid center in Warsaw in July 2022.
Refugees from Ukraine stop at the reception desk at an aid center in Warsaw in July 2022.

The European Commission on June 11 proposed a move to allow Ukrainians who have fled Russian aggression to remain in the European Union until March 4, 2026, extending its Temporary Protection Directive by one year. "Given continued Russian attacks on the civil and critical infrastructure across Ukraine, safe and durable conditions for the return of people to Ukraine are not currently in place," the commission said in a statement. The commission will on June 13 submit the proposal to the Justice and Home Affairs Council for likely adoption. The EU activated the directive in March 2022 after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The commission said nearly 4.2 million Ukrainians are under such protection in the EU.

Romania's Ruling Parties Win Votes, But Extremists Reach European Parliament

Official election documents pile up in downtown Bucharest as transport and other issued dogged the vote count after Romania's elections on June 9.
Official election documents pile up in downtown Bucharest as transport and other issued dogged the vote count after Romania's elections on June 9.

Partial results from Romania's local, mayoral, and European elections showed Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu's ruling Social Democrats (PSD) and their junior coalition partner, the Liberal Party (PNL), leading all groupings but unprecedented success for a 4-year-old party on the far right.

Vote counts were continuing on June 11 after technical delays affected more than half of Romania's counties in the June 9 elections seen as a bellwether for a presidential election in September and parliamentary voting scheduled for December.

But the early returns showed the senior ruling PSD and PNL on top and the extreme nationalist Alliance for the Union of Romanians' (AUR) third-place finish suggesting the populist party continues to make inroads since its first test at the ballot box in 2020.

In partial returns from the local voting, the PSD was leading with nearly 39 percent, followed by the PNL with 30 percent and the AUR with nearly 9 percent. They were followed by the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), which is close to Hungary's Fidesz party, with around 6 percent, and the pro-Western opposition gathered in the Alliance of the United Right (ADU), with less than 3 percent.

The partial tallies also suggested the PSD had won control of 25 of Romania's 41 county councils, five more than in 2020, and the PNL 12 versus 17 in voting four years ago.

The PSD looked poised to win control of nearly 1,500 of the 2,759 mayorships being contested all over the country, and the PNL another 957. The AUR was shut out of any mayoral victories.

An independent incumbent, Nicusor Dan, looked set to win reelection as mayor of Bucharest.

His victory was the only good news for the party that supported him, the ADU. ADU has had trouble facing both the coalition PSD-PNL government and the disappointment of its voters for the many bad decisions made in the last few years. It has yet to decide on its candidate for the presidency, and with a result of 2.77 percent on June 9, it wouldn't pass the 3 percent threshold for seats in parliament in December.

In voting for the European Parliament, where the PSD and PNL ran a joint campaign to fend off the AUR threat, their joint National Coalition for Romania list had 48.7 percent support and a predicted 19 seats.

The AUR was projected at nearly 15 percent and six seats in the European Parliament, below some predictions but the first time Romanian voters have sent representatives of the far right to Strasbourg.

The AUR and its leader, George Simion, have staked out strongly anti-Western positions rooted in the nationalist communism of the Ceausescu dictatorship, questioning Romania's membership in the European Union and NATO, alongside xenophobia and conspiratorial rabble-rousing.

Along with the AUR members in the European Parliament, Diana Sosoaca, the only openly pro-Russian politician in Romania, won a seat in Strasbourg. She heads the SOS party, a faction of the AUR.

Vote counts were suspended late on election night in more than half the country's 41 counties to allow a break for election workers after transport and other problems were reported in some districts.

The authorities declined to identify the affected counties, but sources confirmed to RFE/RL's Romanian Service that they included a downtown district of the capital, Bucharest, as well as Constanta, Cluj, and Brasov.

The tallying was confirmed to have resumed in at least three of those counties early on June 11.

Former Wagner Fighter Jailed For Murder After Return From Ukraine War

 Wagner fighters (file photos)
Wagner fighters (file photos)

A court in the Russian Urals region of Orenburg on June 11 sentenced a former Wagner mercenary group fighter to 18 years in prison for stabbing to death his friend's mother, attempting to murder his friend, and theft. Kirill Smirnov was serving a lengthy prison term for murdering a young woman in 2015 when he was recruited by Wagner to fight in Ukraine. He returned from the war in April 2023. The number of crimes in Russia committed by former Wagner recruits and other former ex-military personnel has been on rise since early 2023 as soldiers returned from duty. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Idel.Realities, click here.

Yerevan's Lone Synagogue Attacked For Fourth Time In A Year

Yerevan's only synagogue was attacked again on June 10 when perpetrators threw rocks through a window.
Yerevan's only synagogue was attacked again on June 10 when perpetrators threw rocks through a window.

The Jewish community in Yerevan said on June 10 that the only synagogue in the Armenian capital was attacked overnight, the fourth such attack since October. Unknown people threw rocks through one of the synagogue's windows. Armenian authorities launched a probe into the attack. Media reports in Israel expressed concerns over the lack of proper response to the attacks. Armenian authorities said earlier that one of the attacks may have been conducted by a Russian tourist but did not give any details. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

Self-Exiled Kremlin Critic Ilya Novikov Sentenced In Absentia

Ilya Novikov (file photo)
Ilya Novikov (file photo)

A Moscow court on June 11 sentenced in absentia noted Russian lawyer and outspoken Kremlin critic Ilya Novikov to 8 1/5 years in prison on a charge of distributing false information about Russia's military, the court's press service said. Novikov, who currently resides in Ukraine, has openly criticized Russia's full-scale aggression against Ukraine. In June 2022, the Moscow Chamber of Attorneys annulled Novikov’s license to practice law. He was later added to the registry of "foreign agents." Novikov, who is also wanted in Russia on high treason charges, continues to work as a lawyer in Kyiv. To read the original story by Current Time, click here.

Court Denies Early Release For Mother Of Chechen Activists Over Change Of Diagnosis

Zarema Musayeva is the mother of Ibragim, Abubakar, and Baisangur Yangulbayev, all of whom have fled the country citing harassment from Chechen authorities over their online criticism of Kremlin-backed Chechen head Ramzan Kadyrov.
Zarema Musayeva is the mother of Ibragim, Abubakar, and Baisangur Yangulbayev, all of whom have fled the country citing harassment from Chechen authorities over their online criticism of Kremlin-backed Chechen head Ramzan Kadyrov.

A court in Russia's North Caucasus region of Chechnya rejected a request by Zarema Musayeva, the imprisoned mother of three self-exiled outspoken Chechen opposition activists, for an early release over her state of health.

The Team Against Torture human rights group on June 10 quoted Musayeva's lawyer Aleksandr Savin as saying the court in the city of Shali backed up its decision by basing it on a new diagnosis made by state medical personnel.

In April, a medical commission in Chechnya replaced Musayeva's previous diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes with multiple complications with a revised assessment of type 2 diabetes without complications.

Musayeva, who is serving a five-year term in a colony settlement -- a dormitory-like penitentiary located near an industrial facility where convicts work alongside regular employees -- was hospitalized in late March after her eyesight deteriorated sharply and lumps appeared on her body.

Human rights groups have said Musayeva needs proper medical assistance as she has an acute form of diabetes, cataracts, and a constant pain in her knee.

Musayeva is the mother of Ibragim, Abubakar, and Baisangur Yangulbayev, all of whom have fled the country citing harassment from Chechen authorities over their online criticism of Kremlin-backed Chechen head Ramzan Kadyrov.

Chechen police and security officers detained Musayeva in January 2022 in her apartment in the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod, some 1,800 kilometers from Chechnya, and forcibly returned her to the North Caucasus region's capital, Grozny.

In July last year, a court in Chechnya sentenced Musayeva to 5 1/2 years in prison on charges of fraud and attacking a police officer, which Musayeva and her supporters have denied.

In September, the Supreme Court of Chechnya shortened Musayeva's prison term by six months and said Musayeva must serve her term in a colony settlement instead of a correctional colony.

Kadyrov, other Chechen officials, and a member of the Russian Duma have publicly vowed to kill all members of the Yangulbayev family, calling them "terrorists."

Journalists, rights activists, and other Russians have urged the government to punish those who issued the threats.

Abubakar Yangulbayev has accused Kadyrov's law enforcement and security officers of "lawlessness on a daily basis in Chechnya" and said the case against his mother is Kadyrov's retaliation for his activities.

Ibragim and Abubakar have said they faced years of pressure from Chechen authorities over their online criticism of Kadyrov and the rights situation in Chechnya.

Many of their relatives have been similarly harassed in Chechnya and even deprived of their homes since Kadyrov and his people vowed to kill them and their families.

The activists' father, retired federal judge Saidi Yangulbayev, and a sister fled Russia in January 2022, following the threats.

Russian and international human rights groups have for years accused Kadyrov of overseeing grave human rights abuses, including abductions, torture, extrajudicial killings, and the persecution of the LGBT community.

Kremlin critics say Putin has turned a blind eye to the abuses because he relies on the former rebel commander to control separatist sentiment and violence in mostly-Muslim Chechnya.

Russian Man Gets 10 Days In Jail For T-Shirt With Ukrainian Symbols

Andrei Yevseyev was found guilty of promoting extremist symbols. (file photo)
Andrei Yevseyev was found guilty of promoting extremist symbols. (file photo)

A Moscow court on June 11 sentenced a 59-year-old resident to 10 days in jail for wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with Ukrainian symbols and the slogan "Glory to Ukraine." Andrei Yevseyev was found guilty of promoting extremist symbols. Police searched his apartment after he was detained on June 8 for wearing the T-shirt in question. A day earlier, the same court sentenced Viktoria Mumrina to seven days in jail on the same charge. Mumrina was accused of wearing a necklace with a pendant in the form of a Ukrainian trident. To read the original story by Current Time, click here.

U.S. Lifts Weapons Ban On High-Profile Ukrainian Military Unit With A Controversial Past

A soldier of the 12th Special Forces Brigade Azov of the National Guard of Ukraine prepares to fire at an undisclosed location in the Donetsk region, Ukraine. (file photo)
A soldier of the 12th Special Forces Brigade Azov of the National Guard of Ukraine prepares to fire at an undisclosed location in the Donetsk region, Ukraine. (file photo)

The United States has removed restrictions on the transfer of American weapons and training to the controversial Ukrainian military unit the Azov Brigade, the State Department said. The U.S. Embassy in Kyiv confirmed the news to RFE/RL as as well. The move will help the unit, one of Ukraine's most effective and popular fighting groups, move beyond its reputation as a far-right movement that has been a constant target of Russian propaganda. The State Department said the Leahy vetting process was applied to the Azov Brigade, which has been taken into Ukraine's National Guard as the 12th Special Forces Brigade. The brigade said in a social media post that "the acquisition of Western weapons will increase the combat capability of 'Azov.'" To read the original story by RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, click here.

Second Probe Reportedly Launched Against Self-Exiled Tatar Activist

Rafis Kashapov (file photo)
Rafis Kashapov (file photo)

The Chelny-biz.ru website in Russia's Republic of Tatarstan said on June 11 that local officials have launched a second probe against self-exiled Tatar activist Rafis Kashapov. According to the website, Kashapov is now suspected of repeated violations of the law on "foreign agents." Tatarstan's officials have yet to confirm the report. Kashapov was previously charged in absentia with the justification of terrorism. He fled Russia in 2018 after serving a three-year prison term for openly criticizing the Russian occupation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. Kashapov currently resides in London. He used to head the Tatar Public Center group that promoted Tatar language and culture. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Tatar-Bashkir Service, click here.

2 Residents Of East Kazakhstan Region Sentenced On Separatism Charges

Oskemen airport (file photo)
Oskemen airport (file photo)

A court in Kazakhstan’s northeastern city of Oskemen handed prison terms to two local residents on June 11 on charges of separatism and calls to seize power. The Prosecutor's Office in the East Kazakhstan region said the two, whose identities were not disclosed, were sentenced to five years in prison each for statements they made online calling for a referendum on incorporating the region into the Russian Federation and to take power by force if the referendum's goal is not achieved. Several Kazakh citizens were handed prison terms on separatism charges since Russia launched its ongoing invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Updated

Zelenskiy Seeks Billions Of Euros For Ukraine Defense, Postwar Recovery At Conference

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (second left), German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (center), and other attendees pose for a photo in Berlin on June 11.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (second left), German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (center), and other attendees pose for a photo in Berlin on June 11.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy says he expects to secure billions of euros in pledges for his country's defense and postwar reconstruction while attending the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Berlin.

Germany is hosting a two-day conference to plan Ukraine's postwar reconstruction and recovery once the war sparked by Russia's full-scale invasion, which has left large swathes of the country in ruins, ends. It brings together 2,000 people from politics, business, and other spheres.

Live Briefing: Russia's Invasion Of Ukraine

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"We will leave this conference with agreements for billions of euros for our defence, regarding the production of military equipment and weapons in Ukraine, and for our energy, for repairing and building a new and more modern energy system," Zelenskiy told the two-day conference that began on June 11 in the German capital.

Zelenskiy highlighted Russian attacks on Ukraine's energy facilities, which he said have destroyed half of the country's electricity generation capacity since winter.

"As a result of the strikes of Russian missiles and drones, 9 gigawatts of capacity have already been destroyed. The peak of electricity consumption last winter was 18 gigawatts. So half now doesn't exist," Zelenskiy said.

Sustained Russian attacks on Ukraine's power grid have forced Kyiv to institute nationwide rolling blackouts.

Zelenskiy urged Kyiv's allies to supply more air-defense systems to Ukraine, saying it was "the answer" to halting Russian advances and securing lasting peace.

"Russia's greatest strategic advantage over Ukraine is superiority in the sky. It is missile and bomb terror that helps Russian troops advance on the ground," Zelenskiy said, adding: "Air defense is the answer."

In a statement issued ahead of the conference, German Development Minister Svenja Schulze said that "even during the current times of war, Ukraine needs to continually rebuild houses, water pipelines, hospitals, and power grids."

"People want to keep on living in their country, and to do so they need electricity, water, and a roof over their heads," the statement added.
Germany is the second-largest supplier of military equipment to Kyiv after the United States.

The conference is taking place a day after the United States removed restrictions on the transfer of American weapons and training to the controversial Ukrainian military unit the Azov Brigade.

The move will help the unit, one of Ukraine's most effective and popular fighting groups, move beyond its reputation as a far-right movement that has been a constant target of Russian propaganda.

The brigade, which ferociously defended the Azovstal steel mill in Mariupol during the early months of Russia’s full-scale invasion before finally succumbing, was barred from using American arms in 2014 because U.S. officials said they found some of its founders embraced racist, xenophobic, and ultranationalist views and that the group associated with far-right groups and neo-Nazi ideology.

UN human rights officials have accused the brigade of committing humanitarian violations.

U.S. law prohibits the provision of equipment and training to foreign military unit or individuals suspected of committing gross human rights violations, but the State Department said the Leahy vetting process was applied to the Azov Brigade, which has been taken into Ukraine's National Guard as the 12th Special Forces Brigade.

It added that it found "no evidence of Gross Violations of Human Rights (GVHR) committed by the 12th Brigade Azov."

The Berlin conference comes ahead of a G7 meeting in Italy on June 13-14 where Ukraine will be one of the main topics as countries discuss how to use profits generated by Russian assets frozen in the West to provide Kyiv with financing.

Following that, more than 90 countries and organizations will be represented at a peace summit in Switzerland over the weekend, although Russia was not invited and China will not attend.

Meeting in Latvia on June 11, NATO's eastern flank leaders, known as the Bucharest Nine, said they will take "a more coordinated approach" to Ukraine when it comes to support.

Meanwhile, Russian forces continued attacks on Ukrainian targets, with Ukrainian authorities saying at least five people were injured in blasts in the city of Konstantynivka in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region.

The office of the regional prosecutor said on Facebook on June 11 that the victims sustained injuries "as a result of broken glass and a powerful blast wave."

At least, 13 residential buildings were damaged by the attack that occurred late in the evening on June 10, the statement added.

With reporting by AP, AFP, and Reuters

Germany Hosts Ukraine Recovery Conference Ahead Of Swiss Peace Summit

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy shake hands at a press conference in Berlin on February 16.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy shake hands at a press conference in Berlin on February 16.

Germany is hosting a conference on June 11 to gather support for Ukraine's recovery from the destruction wreaked by Russia's war, sending a new signal of solidarity with Kyiv at the start of a week of intense diplomacy. The two-day Ukraine Recovery Conference in Berlin, following up on a similar gathering in London a year ago, comes ahead of the Group of Seven summit of Ukraine's leading Western allies in Italy and a global peace summit in Switzerland this coming weekend.

Russian Su-34 Bomber Crashes In Caucasus, Killing Crew

A Russian Sukhoi Su-34 fighter bomber jet fires missiles during the Aviadarts competition outside Ryazan in 2021.
A Russian Sukhoi Su-34 fighter bomber jet fires missiles during the Aviadarts competition outside Ryazan in 2021.

A Russian SU-34 bomber crashed in the Caucasus Mountains during a routine training flight likely due to a technical malfunction, killing the crew aboard, Russian news agencies reported on June 11, citing the Defense Ministry. "In the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania, in a mountainous area, an Su-34 aircraft of the Russian Aerospace Forces crashed during a scheduled training flight," Russia's RIA state news agency cited the Defense Ministry as saying.

U.S., Poland Launch Center To Fight Kremlin Disinformation About Ukraine War

Senior U.S. diplomat James Rubin said the group will include representatives from 12 countries. (file photo)
Senior U.S. diplomat James Rubin said the group will include representatives from 12 countries. (file photo)

The United States and Poland on June 10 launched an international operation based in Warsaw whose mission is to help Ukraine counter Russian disinformation. James Rubin, a senior U.S. diplomat responsible for countering disinformation, and Tomasz Chlon, a Polish diplomat tasked with the same mandate, took part in a ceremony inaugurating the new Ukraine Communications Group. The group, which begins its work on June 11, will comprise representatives from 12 countries, including Canada, France, Germany, Finland, Italy, and Ukraine, Rubin said. The goal will be to try to detect and debunk Russian disinformation campaigns aimed at weakening support for Ukraine globally.

Poland To Reintroduce Buffer Zone At Belarusian Border On June 13

Guards stand along Polish-Belarusian border (file photo)
Guards stand along Polish-Belarusian border (file photo)

Poland will reintroduce a buffer zone at its border with Belarus, the Deputy Interior Minister Czeslaw Mroczek said on June 10. The zone will be introduced on June 13 and will span 60 kilometers along the two sections of the border with the highest number of illegal crossing attempts. Most of the buffer zone will extend 200 meters into Polish territory, but it will expand to 2 kilometers in the Bialowieza forest, Mroczek said. Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced a plan to reintroduce the buffer zone following the fatal stabbing of a Polish soldier by a migrant along the border fence.

Hungary Detains 32 Ukrainians Who Fled Across Border In Truck

The people arrested had been trying to cross Ukraine's border with Hungary, according to the Ukrainian border guard agency. (file photo)
The people arrested had been trying to cross Ukraine's border with Hungary, according to the Ukrainian border guard agency. (file photo)

Hungary has detained 32 Ukrainian citizens who fled across the border in a truck, the Ukrainian border guard agency said on June 10. Hungary “reported that they had discovered a vehicle and detained 32 Ukrainian citizens,” Ukrainian border guard spokesman Andriy Demchenko told news site Ukrayinska Pravda. Demchenko said the truck is not believed to be from the Ukrainian military despite its green paint and black license plate. Martial law was imposed in Ukraine following the onset of Russia’s full-scale invasion, and men of conscription age are barred from leaving the country, although many attempt to flee into neighboring EU states and Moldova.

U.S. Treasury Targets Companies And Vessels Behind Illicit Huthi Shipments

An official with the U.S. Treasury Department said Washington was “committed to disrupting and degrading the Huthis’ ability to engage in attacks.”
An official with the U.S. Treasury Department said Washington was “committed to disrupting and degrading the Huthis’ ability to engage in attacks.”

The United States on June 10 announced sanctions on 10 individuals and vessels that the Treasury Department suspects of aiding Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps-Quds Force (IRGC-QF) and Yemen’s Huthi rebels through illicit oil transport. Among the sanctioned vessels are the Panama-flagged Bella 1 and Janet, which a Treasury Department press release said have supported the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. Sanctions also again targeted Sa’id al-Jamal, who is suspected of running a shipping network and financing the IRGC-QF, the Huthis, and Syria. Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson said the U.S. government was “committed to disrupting and degrading the Huthis’ ability to engage in attacks.”

Iran Sets Series Of Debates For Election Campaign, Warns Media On Coverage

The six approved candidates in Iran's upcoming presidential election (clockwise from top right): Saeed Jalili, Amirhossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, Alireza Zakani, Masud Pezeshkian (composite file photo)
The six approved candidates in Iran's upcoming presidential election (clockwise from top right): Saeed Jalili, Amirhossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, Alireza Zakani, Masud Pezeshkian (composite file photo)

Iranian authorities have announced the commencement of the campaign season for upcoming early presidential elections amid a judicial crackdown on media outlets accused of misrepresenting election coverage.

State broadcaster IRIB said electoral debates are scheduled to begin on June 17, with five planned through June 25, three days before voters head to the polls in a snap election, which was called following the death of President Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter crash last month.

This announcement of the campaign comes amid reports that the Tehran prosecutor's office has taken legal action against two local media outlets, Hashieh News and Bamdadno, on charges of distributing what the judiciary calls "false news" about the elections.

Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, the head of Iran's judiciary, warned media and all candidates -- both the group of six who qualified to contest the election, and more than two dozen others whose candidacies were rejected -- of avoiding “actions” that could be “exploited” by foreign entities.

Furthermore, Ejei cautioned various media platforms against engaging in “defamatory speech, spreading lies, or disturbing public opinion,” as they could end up suffering legal consequences.

Last week, the Iranian government issued strict guidelines in which any content deemed to be aimed at discouraging voter turnout or promoting election boycotts, as well as organizing any form of unlicensed protest gatherings, strikes, or sit-ins, is now classified as "criminal."

The rules mimic previous election mandates and carry severe punishments, including the potential for as many as 74 lashes for those found in violation.

In a significant show of political dissent, Ali Larijani, a prominent figure and former speaker of parliament, publicly criticized the Guardians Council's opaque disqualification practices.

Larijani, who was disqualified from the 2021 presidential race allegedly due to his daughter's residence in the United States, penned an open letter expressing his grievances.

The Guardians Council's list of approved candidates notably excludes several key figures from the current and former administrations, paving the way for a predominantly conservative slate of candidates for the upcoming election.

Five of the candidates are considered hard-liners and conservatives. Only one is a reformist candidate.

Observers said the vote is likely to be a straight fight between two hard-liners: parliament speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and Saeed Jalili, an ultraconservative former chief nuclear negotiator and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's representative on the Supreme National Security Council.

The election comes against a backdrop of widespread public disillusionment, with decreasing voter turnout blamed on allegations of noncompetitive electoral processes.

In recent elections, the authorities severely limited the playing field by disqualifying most moderate and reformist candidates, which may have contributed to the low voter participation seen in recent balloting.

Rights groups have complained of an intensified clampdown on public expressions of discontent since Raisi, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and several others died in the helicopter crash in a mountainous region of northwestern Iran on May 19 while returning from an official visit to Azerbaijan.

Updated

Despite Shift To Far Right In EU Vote, Von Der Leyen Says Centrists Held Against 'Extremes'

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks to the press in Berlin on June 10.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks to the press in Berlin on June 10.

Ursula von der Leyen will face some challenges to secure another five-year term as European Commission president, but her chances appeared good after her European People's Party (EPP) strengthened its grip as the largest faction in the European Parliament in elections across the European Union’s 27 countries that culminated on June 9.

As far-right parties celebrated big gains, Von der Leyen, speaking in Berlin on June 10, cast the results in a positive light for the EPP, which will remain the largest bloc in the 720-member parliament. The initial results show it is possible to "withstand the pressure from the extremes," she said.

Despite the shift to the right, von der Leyen, a member of Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union, was among the main winners in the election. The 65-year-old saw the center-right EPP increase the number of seats it holds in the European Parliament as centrist forces maintained an overall majority in the legislative branch of the 27-member bloc located in Strasbourg.

"We won the European elections," von der Leyen told her grouping as the results were announced, crediting the EPP's record of delivering for the public and managing crises for giving it "the strength to have this good result."

She appeared in prime position to secure another term at the helm of the European Union’s executive, the European Commission, but she will have to get a majority of European Union national leaders to support her and shore up enough support in the new parliament.

As the new parliament takes shape, EU leaders are preparing for a summit on June 17 at which they are expected to have an initial discussion on the nomination before deciding whom to nominate at another summit held in Brussels on June 27-28.

Vassilis Ntousas, an analyst with the German Marshall Fund, said there’s no question about the gains of far-right parties in four days of voting.

“What we saw was some key high-profile wins for the far right, no question about it,” Ntousas told RFE/RL. “France is perhaps the most pronounced of those examples.”

The far-right gains prompted French President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve parliament and announce new national elections immediately after his party’s losses to Marine Le Pen's National Rally were clear on June 9.

But Ntousas said the broader picture shows the far right had modest gains across the bloc and in some countries didn't do as well as preelection polling predicted. The centrist majority that has “really set the tone when it comes to EU policies has held,” he said.

On von der Leyen's chances to win reelection, Ntousas said the odds are with the incumbent, but it remains to be seen what effect the French parliamentary elections will have on the process.

Meanwhile, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni more than doubled her party’s seats in the European Parliament.

"It is a resounding result," Meloni said on June 10 of the gains made by the far-right Brothers of Italy despite a historically low turnout of 49.69 percent.

"It is very important politically and also moving personally," she told Italy’s RTL radio, noting that elsewhere in Europe governing parties had suffered in the polls.

"Italy is going completely against the trend," she said.

Germany’s Alternative for Deutschland (AfD), which had been hounded by scandals, still rallied enough seats to sweep past the slumping Social Democrats of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

Scholz said the gains far-right parties made are worrying and should not become normalized. He added that Germany's coalition parties cannot "go back to business as usual" to win voters back.

The AfD on June 10 said its top candidate, Maximilian Krah, will be excluded from the party's delegation at the European Parliament because of the scandals.

Krah has been accused of having suspicious links to Russia and China, and he touched off a furor by making comments minimizing the crimes of the Nazis. Krah will still enter parliament, but the AfD delegation will be led by Rene Aust. The scandals surrounding the AfD resulted in the party's expulsion from the far-right group within the European Parliament.

With reporting by AFP, dpa, and Reuters

Armenians Camped Outside Parliament Vow Anew To Oust Pashinian

Archbishop Bagrat Galstanian's anti-government supporters camp out on Baghramian Avenue next to the Armenian parliament in Yerevan on June 10.
Archbishop Bagrat Galstanian's anti-government supporters camp out on Baghramian Avenue next to the Armenian parliament in Yerevan on June 10.

More than a dozen tents blocked traffic on a main avenue outside Armenia's parliament on June 10 as supporters of Archbishop Bagrat Galstanian pressed their demand for the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian's government over its territorial concessions to Azerbaijan.

It is the evolving opposition's latest tactic in a confrontation that began in the northeastern province of Tavush in April as Armenia and Azerbaijan began the demarcation process of their heavily militarized border following an agreement announced by Yerevan and Baku.

"This is the first step of the no-confidence process or the first step of the impeachment process," Galstanian told journalists on June 10, one day after he called in front of thousands of people at a rally in Yerevan for four days of nonstop street protests. "I ask you to ask the deputies about legal solutions and steps."

Protesters Camp Out In Yerevan, Calling For Prime Minister's Ouster
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The National Assembly was set to open a new session later in the afternoon next to Baghramian Avenue where green tents were pitched under light rain.

Pashinian, whose Civil Contract party has a two-thirds majority in parliament, has remained defiant under nearly two months of pressure.

Under Armenia's constitution, at least one-third of lawmakers can initiate a no-confidence vote against the prime minister in parliament, provided they also name a candidate who will replace them.

Police have closed several streets leading to the anti-government encampment to avoid disruptions to parliament or a spillover in other parts of the capital.

Galstanian has vowed that the police presence won't intimidate protesters.

At one point late on June 9 a heated verbal exchange broke out between Galstanian, a nationalist priest from one of the embattled border regions who has bridged the divide between faith and government to lead the most serious challenge so far to Pashinian's six-year reign as prime minister.

The outspoken head of the Tavush Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church said that nonstop street protests were needed to "impose our will."

Armenia recently handed over four abandoned villages that used to be part of Soviet Azerbaijan but which came under Armenian control in the early 1990s during the first Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

The handover followed two intense flareups in the past four years in which Azerbaijani forces retook Nagorno-Karabakh from Yerevan-backed ethnic Armenian forces as well as surrounding districts.

The demarcation, which was formally completed on May 15, alters the boundary in a way that affects the infrastructure of a number of Armenian border villages, which the Armenian government has pledged to fix within weeks.

Local populations have expressed fears of possible further Azerbaijani attacks after the Armenian military withdrawal from their positions held for over three decades.

But the Pashinian government insists that having a demarcated border in itself is an assurance against further conflict.

Ukrainian Air Force General Says Some F-16s Will Be 'Stored Outside' Ukraine

Ukrainian Air Force Brigadier General Serhiy Holubtsov
Ukrainian Air Force Brigadier General Serhiy Holubtsov

The chief of aviation in Ukraine's Air Force says some of the dozens of advanced F-16 aircraft pledged to Kyiv by Western allies will be stored abroad to avoid them being hit in Russian attacks in Ukraine.

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Brigadier General Serhiy Holubtsov told Donbas.Realities of RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service in an extended interview that such warplanes abroad will help maintain an operational fleet corresponding to the country's Western-trained pilot corps.

"There are a certain number of aircraft that will be stored at secure air bases, outside of Ukraine, so that they are not targeted here," Holubtsov said, "And this will be our reserve in case of need for replacement of faulty planes during routine maintenance."

President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials have stepped up warnings since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022 that they might target Ukrainian war assets stationed abroad, although doing so could risk escalation with NATO.

The storage abroad of planes or other Ukrainian military assets could "pose a serious danger of NATO being drawn further into the conflict," Putin said last year.

NATO and its members' leaders, including most recently German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on June 2, have repeatedly warned they are prepared "to defend every square inch" of alliance territory.

The head of the Russian Duma's Defense Committee, Andrei Kartapolov, was quoted by RIA Novosti last week as saying NATO bases hosting Ukrainian F-16s would be regarded as "legitimate targets."

Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Norway have combined to pledge more than 60 F-16s to Ukraine since Washington reluctantly gave approval for the U.S.-designed planes to be provided by allies.

But Holubtsov said more countries could do so as they gradually replace aging F-16s with F-35 aircraft.

The New York Times reported in March that Ukraine might receive just six out of dozens of the U.S.-made F-16 fighter jets promised by its Western allies by July, in part because Ukraine wasn't fully prepared to maintain or fly them despite the ongoing training of Ukrainian pilots in the West.

Holubtsov said his estimate of the number of F-16 squadrons needed to gain air superiority locally was evolving especially with the provision of U.S. Patriot surface-to-air missile systems playing "a major role" that could combine with F-16s as the latter became available.

Ukraine has struggled to defend the area around the northeastern city of Kharkiv since a new Russian offensive began there as Kyiv's allies ran into delays in hoped-for provision of weapons, artillery, and other military equipment.

U.S. President Joe Biden's administration recently said it had changed its approach to allow Ukraine to use U.S.-provided weapons to strike at Russian forces and other legitimate military targets in Russia.

Ukrainian Restoration Agency Chief Resigns On Eve Of Berlin Conference

Mustafa Nayyem (file photo)
Mustafa Nayyem (file photo)

The chief of Ukraine's Restoration and Infrastructure Development Agency, Mustafa Nayyem, has resigned just a day before a major conference aimed at rebuilding the country once the war with Russia ends. Nayyem wrote on social networks on June 10 that he made the decision "due to systemic obstacles that prevent me from effectively carrying out my duties." He said that, since November, his team has faced "constant opposition" and "resistance" to carrying out the duties of the agency, including a decision by the prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, to cancel his participation in the conference. An influential public figure and journalist, Nayyem had led the agency since January 2023. Before that he served as deputy infrastructure minister from August 2021. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service, click here.

Trial Of Russian Theater Director Adjourned After Ambulance Called In Courtroom

Yevgenia Berkovich appears in court in Moscow in May 2023.
Yevgenia Berkovich appears in court in Moscow in May 2023.

A Moscow court adjourned to an unspecified date the trial of theater director Yevgenia Berkovich and playwright Svetlana Petriichuk, who are charged with justifying terrorism, after Berkovich felt unwell and an ambulance was called to the courtroom on June 10. The two women have maintained their innocence in the trial, which started on May 20. Berkovich and Petriichuk were arrested last year following a production of the play Finist -- The Brave Falcon. The play is about Russian women who married Muslim men and moved to Syria. If convicted, the women face up to five years in prison each. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Russian Service, click here.

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