
Belarus journalist is convicted of treason and jailed for 10 years as crackdown on dissent continues
Danil Palianski, who worked for several independent news agencies, was sentenced on July 25, but the trial's outcome was only revealed Friday by the Belarusian Association of Journalists. In addition to the prison sentence, Palianski was fined the equivalent of about $7,000.
'Belarus has already become the black hole of Europe, where people are judged for words and thoughts,' said BAJ leader Andrei Bastunets.
Palianski, who was detained in September, is one of 37 journalists behind bars in Belarus.
His jailing is part of a sustained crackdown on government critics after unprecedented mass protests following Lukashenko's disputed election on Aug. 9, 2020. Human rights groups say authorities have arrested more than 65,000 people, and hundreds of thousands more have fled the country in fear of persecution.
There are about 1,187 political prisoners in Belarus, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate and peace activist Ales Bialiatski, according to the human rights group Viasna, which he founded.
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Yahoo
13 minutes ago
- Yahoo
EU leaders urge more pressure on Russia ahead of Ukraine talks
European allies renewed pressure on Russia overnight Saturday as they rallied behind Ukraine in insisting that any deal to end the war include Kyiv ahead of next week's bilateral peace talks in Alaska between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.


Washington Post
15 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Russians cheer Putin's Alaska invitation, envision no concessions on Ukraine
MOSCOW — Russian officials and commentators crowed about landing a summit between President Vladimir Putin and President Donald Trump on Friday in Alaska, the first time the Russian leader has been invited to the United States outside the United Nations since 2007 — and apparently without the Kremlin having made any clear concessions over its war in Ukraine. European and Ukrainian officials, meanwhile, were scrambling to understand and respond to the administration's sudden reversal. Days before announcing the summit this past Friday, Trump was expressing frustration over Putin's continued bombardment of Ukrainian sanctions and threatening to ratchet up sanctions on Russia. Russia's special economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev, a key interlocutor between the Kremlin and the Trump administration, said the decision to hold the summit in Alaska was symbolically important for the U.S.-Russian partnership. The United States purchased the territory from Russia in 1867 for $7.2 million, or about 2 cents per acre. 'Born as Russian America — Orthodox roots, forts, fur trade — Alaska echoes those ties and makes the U.S. an Arctic nation,' Dmitriev wrote on X. Billionaire Konstantin Malofeyev, sanctioned by the Obama administration for funding pro-Kremlin separatists in Ukraine and interfering with elections in several countries, said Alaskans 'respectfully remember their Russian past and their Orthodox present.' Russian military bloggers also celebrated, while tempering expectations. 'The meeting in Alaska has every chance to become historic,' wrote pro-Kremlin war correspondent Alexander Kots on his channel on the Telegram messaging app. 'That is, of course, if the West does not try to pull off another scheme.' Western analysts said Trump should tread carefully. 'Trump has chosen to host Putin in a part of the former Russian Empire,' Michael McFaul, an Obama-era U.S. ambassador to Russia, wrote on X. 'Wonder if he knows that Russian nationalists claim that losing Alaska, like Ukraine, was a raw deal for Moscow that needs to be corrected.' Sam Greene, professor in Russian politics at King's College London, said the venue favored Russia. 'The symbolism of holding the Trump-Putin summit in Alaska is horrendous — as though designed to demonstrate that borders can change, land can be bought and sold,' Greene said. 'Never mind that mainstream Russian discourse maintains a claim that Alaska should be returned to Russia.' A key difference: Czar Alexander II offered to sell Alaska. Putin has seized Ukrainian territory by force, illegally annexing Crimea in 2014 and launching the full invasion and illegally claiming to annex four other Ukrainian regions in 2022. Trump has often expressed admiration for Putin. But in recent weeks, Trump has complained about the Russian leader's resistance to the full and unconditional ceasefire that Ukraine and its allies have demanded before any peace talks. Russian analysts said it was clear that Trump had swerved first in agreeing to the meeting. It was unlikely, they said, that the Kremlin had dropped its ultimate goals for Ukraine — demilitarization, the installation of a pro-Russian regime and neutral status outside NATO. Trump 'didn't want to fall into confrontation with Russia,' said Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow with the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. 'Trump himself said that further sanctions probably wouldn't force Putin to change his mind. We could see from these signals that Trump could be open to a new attempt, and he did so just days before the end of his ultimatum.' A former senior Kremlin official said Russia was moving toward compromise by signaling it was ready for a ceasefire. 'Politically it is easier [for the Kremlin] to continue the war until Ukraine's final collapse than to make peace,' said the former official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter. 'This is why they are clinging on to the idea that there needs to be a temporary but not permanent truce — and then in the meantime [Ukrainian] elections can be conducted.' The Kremlin has long sought to dominate Ukraine through the election of a friendly president and parliament in Kyiv. Ukrainians have repeatedly taken to the streets to demand a free and democratic future in the European Union. Ukrainian and European officials met with Vice President JD Vance on Saturday in an attempt to agree on a response to a Russian ceasefire proposal. Details of the proposal were unclear. One person briefed on the talks said Russia had proposed that Kyiv relinquish Donbas in eastern Ukraine, which includes the Luhansk and Donetsk regions, in exchange for a ceasefire. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive negotiations. The Kremlin is not willing to give back territory in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, where Russian military gains have secured Moscow's prized land bridge to Crimea, the person said. European leaders issued a statement following the talks with Vance, saying a ceasefire should be a precondition for negotiations, not a Russian bargaining chip. Trump told reporters Friday that the Kremlin proposal involved 'some swapping of territories to the betterment of both' countries. Russian analysts said Putin would not agree to withdraw forces from Kherson or Zaporizhzhia, regions Russia illegally annexed in 2022 but still does not fully control. 'Russian troops are not going to make any step backward,' said Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin analyst. The only compromise Russia would make, he said, would be to halt its military campaign to seize the Odesa and Kharkiv regions and the cities of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, which remain under Ukrainian control. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reiterated Saturday that he would not accept any deal that involved giving territory to Russia, which he said was forbidden by Ukraine's constitution. It's not clear whether the Russian proposal included any guarantee Moscow wouldn't simply resume fighting. The Kremlin has insisted that any agreement address what it calls the 'root causes' of the conflict by demilitarizing Ukraine and changing its government. 'There are no guarantees,' said Markov, the pro-Kremlin analyst. 'But there are also no guarantees that Ukraine won't begin the war again.' Russia's main interest in the summit, he said, was to cast Ukraine and Europe as obstacles to Trump's dream of brokering peace. 'Russia hopes that Trump will finally become sensible and see that Zelensky is the main reason for the war that is happening now, and that the second reason for the war is European leaders … and that they are his enemies too,' Markov said. Trump will see that 'Putin is one of his few good political friends.' Janis Kluge, deputy head of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, said Putin's proposal was 'itself part of the war.' 'It's just a temporary ceasefire in exchange for land,' Kluge said. 'It is meant to give Putin an advantage in the longer run against Ukraine and the West.'
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Self-doubt was my ‘secret superpower', Sturgeon says
Nicola Sturgeon has described self-doubt as a 'secret superpower' that drove her career, saying in an interview that she does not think she would have 'got as far in politics without it'. Excerpts from the former first minister of Scotland's new memoir, Frankly, were published by The Times this week, ahead of the book's release on Thursday. The pieces discuss some of the hardest moments of her life and career, as well as conflicted feelings over motherhood and sexuality. In an interview with The Sunday Times, Ms Sturgeon described herself as a 'public introvert', telling the paper: 'I am somebody who can come alive on a stage in front of thousands of people, but put me at a dinner table with four people and I will struggle much, much more.' When asked about the theme of self-doubt running throughout her memoir, she said: 'I spent the earlier part of my life thinking it was a great handicap. I actually came to think it was my secret superpower. 'It definitely drives you on. You work harder. So I wouldn't change it. I don't know that I'd have got as far in politics without it, actually.' The interview also touched on the importance of emotional intelligence for politicians, with Ms Sturgeon telling the paper: 'I think politics sucks it out of people. I also think people with very low emotional intelligence are probably disproportionately attracted to the status. 'I guess it kind of sits with narcissism. I've come across them all my life in politics, people who exude this kind of superiority complex.' Elsewhere, Ms Sturgeon said she was excited about the next chapter in her life. 'I feel happier than I've possibly ever felt,' she told The Sunday Times. 'A future where I can go anywhere, live anywhere I want, form new relationships. I can meet new people, I can do new things, I can find out what it is I want to do with the rest of my life.' In a fresh excerpt from her memoir, Ms Sturgeon claimed Alex Salmond, her predecessor as first minister, may have leaked details about an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against him. And in an extract published on Friday, Ms Sturgeon discussed her arrest in 2023, describing it as 'mental torture'. Ms Sturgeon served as Scottish first minister between 2014 and 2023.