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School Director In Russia's Bashkortostan Fined In Feud Over Ethnic History Books

Tatar historian Vakhit Imamov (file photo)
Tatar historian Vakhit Imamov (file photo)

A court in Russia's Bashkortostan fined school director Svetlana Khakimova 2,000 rubles (about $20) for keeping the book Hidden History of Tatars in her school's library. The book, written by Tatar historian Vakhit Imamov and published in 1994, was banned in 2019 after a local man complained that it incited "religious and ethnic hatred" and advocated Tatarstan's independence from Russia. The court deemed Khakimova guilty of distributing extremist materials, a charge that reflects increasing scrutiny of materials on Russia's non-Russian ethnic histories. This move is part of a broader trend in Russia where authorities are closely monitoring narratives around the country's diverse ethnic groups, especially those with histories of conquest and resistance. To read the original story by RFE/RL’s Idel.Realities, click here.

Bill Banning 'Childfree Propaganda' Gets Final Approval From Russian Lawmakers

The legislation imposes fines for promoting the choice not to have children, with penalties reaching up to 5 million rubles ($51,150) for organizations and 400,000 rubles ($4,090) for individuals.
The legislation imposes fines for promoting the choice not to have children, with penalties reaching up to 5 million rubles ($51,150) for organizations and 400,000 rubles ($4,090) for individuals.

Russia's State Duma passed a bill on November 12 in its second and third readings that would ban "childfree propaganda," marking the government's latest move to regulate social discourse while pushing President Vladimir Putin's "family values" agenda.

The bill now awaits approval from the Federation Council, the upper house of parliament, before Putin can sign it into law.

The legislation imposes fines for promoting the choice not to have children, with penalties reaching up to 5 million rubles ($51,150) for organizations and 400,000 rubles ($4,090) for individuals.

Russia faces a significant population decline, an issue Putin has frequently highlighted as urgent.

The government has introduced various measures to boost population growth, including financial support for families, restrictions on abortions, and tightened controls on content deemed contrary to family values, such as LGBT-related materials.

Putin has framed these efforts as essential for boosting Russia's birth rate and securing its future. Critics, however, contend that the ban reflects a broader state agenda aimed at ensuring a steady supply of "future soldiers for the Kremlin," suggesting demographic policies are aligned with military needs.

Overall, Russian casualties -- killed or wounded in action -- are believed to exceed 500,000 according to Western estimates, with more men killed over the past 32 months than in an entire decade of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

The drive to outlaw the childfree movement has gained traction in recent months, with Russian officials, including Federation Council Chairwoman Valentina Matviyenko, linking the trend to "radical feminism" from the West.

Matviyenko and others argue that promoting voluntary childlessness undermines family values and worsens Russia's demographic challenges.

Meanwhile, a recent study by Russia's Higher School of Economics underscores the complexities of the demographic crisis.

Polls indicate that many Russians are delaying or opting out of having children due to factors like the war in Ukraine, political uncertainty, economic strain, and rising social anxiety.

Polish President Refuses Group Photo At COP29 Summit Due To 'Lukashenka's Presence'

Azerbaijan is hosting the COP29 summit in Baku.
Azerbaijan is hosting the COP29 summit in Baku.

Polish President Andrzej Duda has skipped the official group photo at the COP29 climate summit in Baku, with Polish broadcaster Polsat saying the decision was driven by the presence of the authoritarian ruler of Belarus, Alyaksandr Lukashenka.

Lukashenka has been condemned by many Western leaders for his repressive domestic policies and alignment with Russia.

"This is a symbolic moment of the so-called family photo, when the leaders of the countries participating in the summit stand shoulder to shoulder and pose for a joint photo. The president boycotted this moment due to the fact that the leader of Belarus, Alyaksandr Lukashenka, was also there," a source close to Duda's delegation told Polsat.

"This is a symbolic disassociation, due to, among other things, Belarus's involvement in the developments in Ukraine."

At a previous summit in Dubai, leaders from Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia similarly chose to opt out of being in a photo that included Lukashenka.

The incident underscores Poland’s position as a staunch critic of Belarus's policies and as a frontline state supporting Ukraine amid Russia's ongoing full-scale invasion.

The COP29 summit, which kicked off in the Azerbaijani capital on November 11, is a critical gathering for addressing climate change, but the event also reflects broader geopolitical divides.

Lukashenka's presence contrasts with the notable absence of major Western leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron, and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, as well as Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

With reporting by Polsat

Russian Pediatrician Gets 5 Years For Anti-War Comments To Patients

Nadezhda Buyanova appears in court in Moscow in May. (file photo)
Nadezhda Buyanova appears in court in Moscow in May. (file photo)

A 68-year-old Russian pediatrician has been sentenced to five years in prison on charges related to the dissemination of so-called fake news about the Russian military after a patient's mother accused her of making anti-war comments.

After the judge at the Tushino district court in Moscow on November 12 sentenced Nadezhda Buyanova, who has denied making the alleged comments, dozens of people in the courtroom shouted "Shame!" and expressed solidarity with the doctor.

The case highlights the growing trend of Russians turning in other Russians for making anti-war statements as the Kremlin's full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine nears its 33rd month.

According to OVD-Info, at least 1,057 people have faced criminal prosecution for making comments deemed to be against the war while at least 20,061 have been detained for anti-war protests.

The case against Buyanova was initiated after a complaint from Anastasia Akinshina, a Moscow mother who brought her 7-year-old son in for a checkup.

During the appointment, Buyanova allegedly noticed that the child was acting nervous.

When Akinshina explained that her son was struggling with the trauma of losing his father, a Russian soldier killed in the war in Ukraine, Buyanova is said to have referred to the deceased father as a "legitimate military target" in front of the child.

The remark, according to Akinshina, prompted her to file a complaint with law enforcement.

Buyanova has denied making any such statement and insisted that she did not discuss the military or the boy's father with Akinshina during the visit. The pediatrician maintains that she is the victim of a false accusation.

Buyanova was dismissed from her job following the complaint and has since been fighting for reinstatement. A court ruled in her favor in July, demanding that she be reinstated to her position at the medical clinic.

The case has drawn attention from human rights groups and the media, particularly due to the growing number of legal actions under Russia's "fake news" law, which has been increasingly used to silence critics of the government and its military actions related to the war in Ukraine.

Critics argue that the law is part of a broader pattern of repression designed to stifle dissent and control public discourse regarding Russia's actions in Ukraine.

Russia Issues Warrant For International Criminal Court Judge

The International Criminal Court in The Hague
The International Criminal Court in The Hague

A Moscow court has issued an arrest warrant for International Criminal Court (ICC) Judge Haykel Ben Mahfoudh on a charge of "illegal incarceration."

The court said on November 11 that the charge stemmed from the ICC's issuance of arrest warrants for former Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and armed forces' Chief of Staff Valery Gerasimov.

Mahfoudh and his ICC colleagues, Rosario Salvatore Aitala and Sergio Gerardo Ugalde Godinez, issued the arrest warrants for Shoigu and Gerasimov in late June for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Ukraine after the start of Russia's unprovoked invasion of its neighbor in 2022.

According to the ICC judges, Shoigu and Gerasimov were responsible for Russian missile strikes conducted between October 2022 and at least March 9, 2023, against Ukraine's energy infrastructure.

Ukraine Invasion: News & Analysis

RFE/RL's Ukraine Live Briefing gives you the latest developments on Russia's invasion, Western military aid, the plight of civilians, and territorial control maps. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war, click here.

The ICC statement issued at the time said that "the expected incidental civilian harm and damage would have been clearly excessive to the anticipated military advantage" for those who ordered the strikes.

Shoigu was dismissed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in May. He now heads Putin's Security Council.

Earlier last year, Russian authorities added Aitala, along with ICC Judge Tomoko Akane and Prosecutor Karim Khan to their wanted list after they issued arrest warrants in March 2023 for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russia's children's commissioner, Maria Lvova-Belova, for being responsible for the deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia following the invasion -- a war crime under international legislation.

Russia retaliated by opening criminal cases against the ICC officials.

The ICC does not have the means to enforce its arrest warrants but relies instead on the judiciaries of its 124 members to fulfill them.

With reporting by Rapsinews and Meduza
Updated

North Korea Approves Deal With Moscow That Allows Troop Deployment

Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attend a state reception in Pyongyang in June where the pact was agreed.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attend a state reception in Pyongyang in June where the pact was agreed.

North Korea has ratified a "comprehensive strategic partnership" agreement with Russia, cementing a deal that has paved the way for its soldiers to fight on Russian soil against Ukraine.

North Korea's state-controlled news agency KCNA said on November 12 that the deal, which was agreed between Moscow and Pyongyang in June, will take full effect once both sides exchange ratified copies of the agreement.

According to reports from South Korea's Yonhap news agency, Russian President Vladimir Putin has already signed the documents.

The deployment of North Korean troops in Russia's Kursk region, which has been confirmed by U.S., NATO, South Korean, and Ukrainian intelligence, has raised concerns that it will further destabilize the Asia-Pacific region and broaden Moscow's war on Ukraine.

South Korea has raised questions about what new military technologies North Korea might get from Russia in exchange for supplying troops.

"Russia working together with North Korea, Iran, and China is not only threatening Europe, it's threatening peace and security, yes, here in Europe, but also in the Indo-Pacific and in North America," NATO Chief Mark Rutte said in Paris on November 12 ahead of talks later in the day with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Russia has had to shift some resources to the Kursk border region to respond to a Ukrainian incursion launched in August, and its forces have struggled to push back Ukrainian troops there.

The United States has estimated about 10,000 North Korean troops are in Russia now. Seoul and its allies assess that the number has increased to 11,000, while Ukraine has put the figure higher, at up to 12,000.

Moscow and Pyongyang have trumpeted their increased defense cooperation since the launch of the invasion, but the Kremlin has neither denied nor directly confirmed the presence of North Korean troops on its soil.

The bolstering of Russian forces comes at a time when it appears to be making advances in Ukraine despite incurring heavy casualties.

NATO's Rutte, in the face of the battlefield gains by Russia and the election in the United States of Donald Trump, who has been critical of how much aid the West has given to Kyiv, called for continued support of Ukraine from allies.

"We must recommit to stay the course of the war and we must do more than just keep Ukraine in the fight," Rutte said.

"We need to raise the cost for Putin and his enabling authoritarian threats by providing Ukraine with the support it needs to change the trajectory of the conflict."

Macron agreed, saying the "only way toward negotiations" was to make sure that nothing is decided about "Ukraine without the Ukrainians and on Europe without the Europeans."

Jailed Mother Of Chechen Bloggers Faces New Charges

Zarema Musayeva (file photo)
Zarema Musayeva (file photo)

Investigators in the Russian North Caucasus region of Chechnya have launched a new probe against Zarema Musayeva, the jailed mother of three Chechen opposition bloggers in exile. Musayeva's lawyer, Aleksandr Savin, said on November 11 that his client was being investigated for "attacking a guard" and "disrupting" order in the prison, and faced an additional five years if found guilty. The 55-year-old Musayeva, whom the Memorial rights group has recognized as a political prisoner, is was jailed on charges of fraud and attacking a police officer, which she and her supporters have rejected. Her prison sentence is scheduled to end in March 2025. Musayeva is the mother of Ibragim, Abubakar, and Baisangur Yangulbayev, all of whom fled Russia due to harassment by the Chechen authorities over their vocal criticism of Kremlin-backed Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Idel.Realities, click here.

Bashkir Activist Released From Russian Prison After Health Deteriorates

Rustem Mulyukov (file photo)
Rustem Mulyukov (file photo)

A Russian court granted the "immediate" release of ethnic Bashkir activist Rustem Mulyukov on November 12 due to his deteriorating health. The 47-year-old activist has been on dialysis due to failing kidneys since late 2023. Previous requests by his lawyers for a medical release were rejected. Mulyukov was sentenced to 30 months in prison in June 2023 along with the former chief of late opposition politician Aleksei Navalny's team in Bashkortostan, Lilia Chanysheva, who was handed a 7 1/2-year term. Both were found guilty of extremism, a charge they and rights organizations called politically motivated. Chanysheva was released in August as part of a major prisoner swap between Russia and the West. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Idel.Realities, click here.

Updated

Abkhazia Opposition Activists Released Amid Protests

Gari Kokaia, Ramaz Jopua, and Omar Smiri are three of the five Abkhazian activists who were detained on November 11 following protests in Sukhumi.
Gari Kokaia, Ramaz Jopua, and Omar Smiri are three of the five Abkhazian activists who were detained on November 11 following protests in Sukhumi.

Authorities in Georgia's Moscow-backed breakaway region of Abkhazia on November 12 released five opposition activists after protesters blocked all three access bridges into the capital, Sukhumi and a major highway.

The five -- Omar Smiri, Gari Kokaia, Almaskhan Ardzinba, Ramaz Jopua, and Aslan Gvaramia -- who were protesting the authorities' awarding major construction contracts to Russian companies, had been detained on November 11 following a skirmish with lawmaker Almas Akaba outside the regional assembly in Sukhumi.

The incident was recorded and posted on Telegram channels. General Prosecutor Adgur Agrba said the five were detained after they "committed illegal acts against a lawmaker in the backyard of the assembly building following an extraordinary session."

The five were accused of petty hooliganism, but the Sukhumi court stopped the proceedings against them due to the absence of an administrative offense, according to a report by journalist Eleonora Giloyan.

Aslan Bartsits, the leader of opposition party People's Unity Forum, said the activists were protesting the recently signed Investment Activity Agreement between Russia and Abkhazia, which gives Russian firms the right to invest in construction projects in the separatist region.

Telegram channel Baza, which has ties to Russia's security services, said the agreement regards the building of multifunctional complexes in Abkhazia.

News of the detention of the five, who were taken to the building of the local security service, spread rapidly on social media late on November 11, with protesters gathering outside the building and trying to ram the gates with a car before moving to the capital's Freedom Square.

All the three access bridges into Sukhumi -- Gumisti, Lower Gumisti, and Kodori -- and a highway were also blocked early in the morning by protesters demanding the activists' release.

It was not immediately clear if the protesters opened access to the bridges and the highway after the five were released. Kodori Bridge was temporarily reopened earlier in the day before being closed again by protesters, while protesters were allowing the access of public transport on Gumisti Bridge.

Telegram channels posted videos purporting to show scuffles between security forces and protesters on Kodori Bridge.

The region's health minister, Eduard Butba, claimed in a statement that ambulances "cannot freely travel to their destinations" and medical institutions had been switched to emergency mode.

Abkhazia's official news agency, Apsnipress, reported that the region's leader, Aslan Bzhania, whose residence was protected by the military, called a security council meeting due to the "situation caused by the illegal blocking of the republic's highway."

Abkhazia and South Ossetia broke away from Georgia's rule after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Moscow recognized the independence of the two regions after Russian forces repelled a Georgian attempt to retake South Ossetia in a five-day war in the summer of 2008 that ended with Georgia's defeat.

Most countries still recognize Abkhazia as part of Georgia.

The Abkhazian opposition is against the construction agreement with Russia and is planning a protest on November 15, the day of the ratification of the agreement.

Updated

Kryviy Rih, Mykolayiv Declare Day Of Mourning After Deadly Russian Attacks

Emergency crews work at the site of the deadly Russian strike in Kryviy Rih on November 11.
Emergency crews work at the site of the deadly Russian strike in Kryviy Rih on November 11.

The Ukrainian cities of Kryviy Rih and Mykolayiv have announced a day of mourning in the aftermath of Russian strikes in recent days that killed at least nine civilians, including three children, as Moscow kept up its daily attacks on civilian and energy infrastructure at the onset of winter.

The day of mourning is to be observed on November 13 in the central city of Kryviy Rih, where a 32-year-old woman and her three children -- a 10-year-old, a 2-year-old, and a 2-month-old baby -- were killed in a missile strike that destroyed their five-story apartment building.

The four victims were pulled out of the rubble by rescue workers after an hourslong search, the city's governor, Oleksandr Vilkul, reported early on November 12. Another 14 people, including children, were wounded in the strike.

In the southern city of Mikolayiv, where at least five people were killed by a Russian strike on an apartment building on November 11, Mayor Oleksandr Syenkevych announced a day of mourning on November 12.

Russian Strikes On Ukraine's Mykolayiv, Kryviy Rih Leave At Least 5 Dead (Video)
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"Today in Mykolaiv, the day of mourning for our citizens, who died as a result of the attack of the Russian invaders on November 11, was declared," Syenkevych said on Telegram.

Ukraine Invasion: News & Analysis

RFE/RL's Ukraine Live Briefing gives you the latest developments on Russia's invasion, Western military aid, the plight of civilians, and territorial control maps. For all of RFE/RL's coverage of the war, click here.

In a separate Russian strike on November 12, four people were wounded in the village of Bilenke in Donetsk, Ukraine's Emergency Services reported.

Ukraine's air force, meanwhile, reported that Russia attacked 10 Ukrainian regions -- Kyiv, Zhytomyr, Poltava, Sumy, Kharkiv, Cherkasy, Zaporizhya, Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, and Mykolayiv -- with missiles, glide bombs, and 110 drones.

Air defenses shot down 46 Russian drones, while 60 drones were lost after their navigation systems were jammed by Ukrainian electronic-warfare systems, the air force reported.

Russian officials said that Ukrainian drone strike early on November 12 set a fuel depot on fire in Stary Oskol, a city in Russia's Belgorod region some 100 kilometers from the Ukrainian border.

Regional Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said on Telegram that there were no immediate reports of casualties.

Separately, Russia's Defense Ministry said its air defenses shot down 13 Ukrainian drones, nine of them in Belgorod, two in Bryansk, and two in the Kursk region.

Updated

Belarusian Prankster Dupes Russian Teachers Into Wearing Tinfoil Hats To Ward Off 'Foreign Enemies'

Teachers in a school in Russia's Voronezh region were tricked into wearing "protective" pro-Russia tinfoil hats.
Teachers in a school in Russia's Voronezh region were tricked into wearing "protective" pro-Russia tinfoil hats.

A famous Belarusian prankster who has garnered a reputation for duping schools to highlight the “fascistization of Russian society” has tricked teachers in Russia's Voronezh region into wearing pro-Russia “protective” tinfoil hats.

Vladislav Bokhan, an exiled Belarusian artist and activist who lives in Poland, wrote on Telegram on November 9 that in July he sent out what appeared to be an official government directive to schools in the Voronezh region to organize events in which tinfoil hats bearing the Russian flag were made.

The hats, the order said, would “protect against foreign enemies.” The schools were also instructed to provide videos and images of the teachers wearing the hats to -- what they thought was -- the government.

Belarusian Artist Says Tinfoil Hat Prank Tests 'Fascistization' In Russian Society
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In one video shared by Bokhan on Telegram, a teacher talks about the supposed benefits of the tinfoil hat, which the fake government order described as the “helmet of the fatherland.”

“Let the helmet that you make with your own hands become a means of protection against foreign enemies of our wonderful country,” the teacher says in the video.

Bokhan has staged several similar pranks aimed at opposing Russia's invasion of Ukraine and highlighting contradictions and hypocrisy in government rhetoric.

On Telegram, he said his latest prank was the continuation of “measuring the level of fascistization of Russian society” based on Italian historian and philosopher Umberto Eco’s renowned essay, Ur-Fascism.

Last year, Bokhan posed as a Russian lawmaker and tricked several schools into sending birthday messages to President Vladimir Putin bearing a photograph and quotes by Stepan Bandera, a World War II-era Ukrainian partisan leader who has been vilified by the Kremlin.

In 2022, Bokhan duped several Russian schools into holding marches to pay tribute to him, pretending to be a military hero serving in Ukraine.

Demonstrators were pictured holding signs saying, “Vladislav is our hero.”

Another action that Bokhan pulled off was tricking schoolteachers in a Moscow region town to participate in a municipal cleanup day carrying slogans used by Nazis at concentration camps.

COP29 Climate Conference Kicks Off, And So Does The Bickering

Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg (left) protests in Tbilisi on November 11 against COP 29 being held in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg (left) protests in Tbilisi on November 11 against COP 29 being held in Baku, Azerbaijan.

The 29th UN Climate Change Conference (COP29) kicked off in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, on November 11 with hopes of making headway in the global battle to combat climate change. But it didn't take long for the proceedings to grind to a halt as bickering erupted over the meeting's agenda.

The talks hit a snag, according to several media outlets, when some countries wanted more focus on moving forward in the transition away from fossil fuels, while others, mainly oil and gas producing nations, wanted to limit talk on the COP28 agreement reached last year to mainly look at finance.

"Let's dispense with the idea that climate finance is charity," U.N. climate chief Simon Stiell said in a speech.

"An ambitious new climate finance goal is entirely in the self-interest of every nation, including the largest and wealthiest."

With the UN's World Meteorological Organization forecasting that 2015-2024 will be the hottest decade ever recorded, and extreme climate events popping up across the globe, the talks in Baku, which run until November 22, are seen as crucial for making progress before it's too late.

Clouding the talks further is last week's election of Donald Trump as U.S. president.

Trump campaigned on raising fossil fuel output in the United States, which is already at a record high.

Even the U.S. climate envoy John Podesta couldn't hide his concerns over how the incoming administration will address climate change given Trump's often-stated goal of removing the country from international climate cooperation agreements.

"For those of us dedicated to climate action, last week's outcome in the United States is obviously bitterly disappointing," Podesta said at the summit.

"But what I want to tell you today is that while the United States federal government, under Donald Trump, may put climate action on the back burner, the work to contain climate change is going to continue in the United States."

Even before the start of COP29, questions around the commitment to real progress were being asked given the choice of oil-rich Azerbaijan as host of the event.

Authoritarian President Ilham Aliyev has been chided for failing to devise and implement sufficient climate change plans at home, where he is also accused of human rights violations, including the detention of independent media figures, such as journalist and economist Farid Mehralizada, who is affiliated with RFE/RL and recently marked his fifth month in custody on charges that he and his supporters say are fabricated.

Greta Thunberg Slams Climate Summit Hosted By Azerbaijan
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"Azerbaijan, using COP29 as a facade, is ramping up control under a false 'green' agenda, tightening its grip on power, and escalating regional tensions," Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg said in a post on X.

Thunberg led a protest in neighboring Georgia on November 11 after saying she wouldn't be attending COP29 over Azerbaijan’s climate and human rights record.

Azerbaijan has long regarded holding large-scale events as a path toward international prestige.

It hosted the Eurovision Song Contest in 2012. It has bid repeatedly, albeit unsuccessfully, to host the Summer Olympic Games and has hosted two Olympics-like events, the European Games in 2015 and the Islamic Solidarity Games in 2017. Since 2017, it has hosted the Formula One circuit’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix through downtown Baku.

But. on the streets of Baku, residents seemed unimpressed by their government's efforts to host another high-profile international event.

Voices From Baku: Residents Weigh In On Hosting COP29
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Voices From Baku: Residents Weigh In On Hosting COP29

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"COP 29 is being held because [the authorities] want to promote Azerbaijan, that is one thing. Secondly people will come and gather here and Azerbaijan's money will go [toward feeding them]," one female resident of the capital complained.

"The poor, the poor families, the families of veterans, the disabled will be left aside, they will not be supported, but COP 29 will be held here. They will spend millions [on the organization of COP 29]. Why do we need this?"

With reporting by Reuters

EU On Way To Reach Million-Shell Pledge For Ukraine This Year, Borrell Says

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said 980,000 shells had already been delivered. (file photo)
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said 980,000 shells had already been delivered. (file photo)

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has said the bloc is on its way to belatedly fulfill a pledge to supply Ukraine with 1 million artillery shells. Borrell, who is in Kyiv, told the European Pravda news outlet on November 11 that so far the EU had delivered 980,000 shells to Kyiv. "I know that we made a commitment to reach this level by spring -- and we failed. But we will be able to [fulfill it] by the end of the year," Borrell said. "We almost did it. We have already delivered more than 980,000 shells." A separate Czech-led EU initiative launched in February aimed to buy up to 500,000 artillery shells for Ukraine from countries outside Europe until the end of the year. By October, just over one-third of the shells had been delivered to Ukraine. Russian forces outfire Ukrainian ones at a rate of 5-to-1 on the battlefield.

Russian-American Loses Appeal Over $51 Ukraine Donation, Faces 12 Years

Ksenia Karelina moved to the United States in 2015, married a U.S. citizen, and received U.S. citizenship in 2021. (file photo)
Ksenia Karelina moved to the United States in 2015, married a U.S. citizen, and received U.S. citizenship in 2021. (file photo)

A Russian court in Yekaterinburg has upheld the 12-year prison sentence handed down in August to dual U.S.-Russian citizen Ksenia Karelina for treason after she was found guilty of transferring $51 to a Ukrainian aid charity in early 2022.

The Second Court of Appeal of General Jurisdiction confirmed the verdict in a statement on Telegram on November 11.

The 33-year-old Karelina, who is also known by her married surname Khavana, moved to the United States in 2015, married a U.S. citizen, and received U.S. citizenship in 2021.

She was arrested in Yekaterinburg in January on suspicion of petty hooliganism.

On February 7, however, treason charges were filed against her after investigators learned that on the second day of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, she had transferred $51 to Razom, a Ukrainian aid group that helps civilians affected by the war.

Karelina's lawyer, Mikhail Mushailov, has said his client admitted to making the donation, and that prosecutors found evidence of the donation on her mobile phone.

The U.S. State Department said after the verdict was handed down that it was aware of Karelina's case, with spokesman Vedant Patel adding that Russia "has a track record of...not recognizing their (dual nationals') American citizen status and frankly being uncooperative when it comes to...meeting their obligations under consular conventions."

Patel also noted that donating to a nonprofit, NGO, or supporting the Ukrainian cause and its people, especially on American soil, was not a crime. He also strongly condemned the Kremlin's "escalating domestic repression."

Updated

Pro-EU Rally Held In Tbilisi As President Says Ruling Party 'Captured' Georgia

An EU delegation addresses a crowd of protesters in Tbilisi on November 11.
An EU delegation addresses a crowd of protesters in Tbilisi on November 11.

Thousands of people rallied in the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, on November 11 to demand fresh elections amid allegations that Russia helped the ruling party, Georgian Dream, to rig the October 26 vote.

A delegation of EU lawmakers, who had earlier met Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili, attended the rally in which protesters held up signs that read "We are Europe" and "Georgia votes for the EU."

Zurabishvili said after meeting the visiting EU delegation that the Russian-friendly Georgian Dream party had "virtually captured" all institutions and called for new elections to put the Caucasus country back on track toward Euro-Atlantic integration.

Zurabishvili spoke at a news conference in Tbilisi on November 11 after a meeting with the delegation of EU lawmakers following the disputed elections last month that Georgian Dream claimed to have won with some 54 percent of the vote amid allegations of widespread fraud and Russian influence.

Georgians have held several protests since the October 26 elections against the results and have called for a repeat of the vote as protracted deliberations at Georgia's Appeals Court failed to validate documented complaints by the opposition about violations of electoral confidentiality and violent incidents.

"We are entering a crisis," Zurabishvili, who has refused to recognize the election results, told journalists.

"There can be no surprises here, the crisis is obvious," Zurabishvili said, adding that the country needed "new elections so that Georgia can get a legitimate parliament, a legitimate government, and a legitimate new president when the time comes."

The EU delegation was formed from heads of the foreign relations committees from the parliaments of Germany, Finland, Sweden, France, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and Poland.

Addressing the crowd of protesters outside the Georgian parliament on November 11, Michael Roth, chairman of the German parliament's foreign relations committee, urged the protesters to "not give up" and declared, "You have a place in Europe... we are with you."

Georgia last year obtained the coveted status of EU candidate country but backsliding on democracy and rule of law by Georgian Dream, which included pushing through a Russian-style "foreign agents" law and anti-LGBT measures, have prompted Brussels to warn that the country's path toward integration was in danger.

European Commission President Charles Michel on November 8 said that "there are serious suspicions of fraud, which require a serious investigation" after the October 26 vote.

Shalva Papuashvili, the speaker of the Georgian Dream-controlled parliament, refused to meet with the EU delegation on November 11, claiming on social media that the reason for his refusal was "the unfriendly attitude towards the Georgian government and the Georgian society that has been shown many times" by the visiting delegation's governments.

Several members of the EU delegation criticized Papuashvili's refusal to meet with them.

Lithuania's Zigimantas Pavillionis said Georgian Dream had "failed" the test on democracy, while French lawmaker Frederic Petit called Papuashvili's refusal "unexpected" and Germany's Michael Roth said it was "regrettable."

Kremlin Denies Report Of Putin-Trump Call As 'Completely Untrue'

 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the reports were "completely false." (file photo)
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the reports were "completely false." (file photo)

The Kremlin has denied media reports of a phone call between U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying that the reports were "completely false."

The Washington Post, citing sources close to Trump, reported on November 10 that Trump had spoken with Putin by phone on November 7 and discussed the war in Ukraine. It said Trump took the call in Florida a day after speaking with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Unnamed sources quoted by the newspaper said Trump told Putin not to escalate the war in Ukraine and expressed an interest in further talks on "the resolution of Ukraine’s war soon."

Reuters also reported on the call.

"This is completely untrue. This is pure fiction, it's just false information," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the media on November 11. "There was no conversation."

Putin initially responded coolly to Trump's big election win before informally congratulating the president-elect on November 7. He praised Trump's "courage" in surviving an assassination attempt in July and said he was “ready” to speak to him.

"This is the clearest example of the quality of the information that is being published nowadays, sometimes even by quite reputable outlets," Peskov said.

Peskov added that there were "no concrete plans yet" for such a call.

Peskov also said that the Kremlin has noticed "a certain nervousness" in Europe following Trump's reelection.

On the campaign trail ahead of the November 5 election, Trump claimed he would end the war in Ukraine without offering details about how he planned to do so.

Trump has previously indicated Ukraine may have to agree to give up territory to strike a peace deal with Russia.

People familiar with the call told the Post that Kyiv had been informed of the Putin call and did not object.

However, Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Heorhiy Tikhiy on November 10 told Reuters that Kyiv had had no knowledge of a call between the two.

"Reports that the Ukrainian side was informed in advance about the alleged call are false. Accordingly, Ukraine could not approve or oppose the call," Tykhiy said.

Updated

Syrskiy Says Russians Pressing Kursk Advance As Borrell Makes Final Visit To Ukraine

Ukraine's top military commander, Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskiy (file photo)
Ukraine's top military commander, Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskiy (file photo)

Russia is massing tens of thousands of troops in Kursk, where it is attempting to regain control of the territory lost to Ukrainian forces following Kyiv's incursion into the Russian region this summer, Ukraine's top military commander said on November 11.

"Following the orders of their military leadership, they are trying to displace our troops and advance deep into the territory we control," Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskiy wrote on social media, adding, "Were it not for the resilience of our soldiers, these tens of thousands of enemies from the best Russian units would have stormed our positions."

Ukrainian forces in August launched an unexpected incursion into Kursk, which borders Ukraine, capturing several settlements and strengthening their positions in the first such deployment into Russian territory since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

According to Ukraine's military, its forces have seized control of some 1,000 square kilometers of Russian territory since August, with Moscow acknowledging that 28 settlements were under Ukrainian control.

Syrskiy on November 9 confirmed reports that thousands of North Korean soldiers were massing alongside Russian forces in Kursk likely in preparation for a counteroffensive.

Separately, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in a post on Telegram on November 11 that Ukrainian forces in Kursk "continue to hold back the almost 50,000-strong enemy group outside of Ukraine."

"We have numerous data on the preparation of North Korean soldiers to participate in combat on the side of Russian troops," Syrskiy wrote on Facebook following a telephone conversation with General Christopher Cavoli, who heads the U.S. European Command. He said he told Cavoli that the situation "remains challenging and shows signs of escalation."

On the same day, the EU's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell traveled to Kyiv in what is the first visit by a senior Western official to Ukraine since Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election last week.

Trump and his allies have suggested that Ukraine may have to cede territory to Russia to secure a peace deal and end the war.

"Certainly it would not be a victory for the American leadership if Ukraine crumbles down and Putin wins the war," Borrell told the AFP news agency on his last visit to Ukraine before leaving office. His trip appeared to be aimed at allaying concerns in Kyiv about whether it still has the EU's backing irrespective of the outcome of the U.S. election.

Ukraine's outmanned and outgunned forces in the east have been facing a grinding Russian offensive that has been making incremental progress despite huge losses on Moscow's side.

According to an estimate by Britain's Chief of the Defense Staff Tony Radakin, an average of some 1,500 Russian soldiers were killed or injured per day in October -- Russia's worst month for casualties since the beginning of the invasion.

WATCH: At least five people were killed in a Russian strike on a residential building in the southern city of Mikolayiv, while seven people, including two children, were hurt in a strike in Kriviy Rih.

Russian Strikes On Ukraine's Mykolayiv, Kryviy Rih Leave At Least 5 Dead (Video)
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Meanwhile, Russia was continuing to pound Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure at the onset of the cold season -- a third winter of war for Ukraine's civilian population that in previous years faced energy shortages.

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In the southern city of Mikolayiv, at least five people were killed In a Russian strike on a residential building early on November 11, regional Governor Vitaliy Kim said. The mayor of the city, Oleksandr Syenkevych, said Russian strikes damaged residential buildings in several areas of the city.

In another southern city, Zaporizhzhya, one person was killed and 21 others, including a 4-year-old boy and four teenagers, were wounded in three Russian strikes, regional Governor Ivan Fedorov reported, adding that a residential building and a school dormitory were damaged in the attack.

Blasts were also heard in Kyiv, and areas of the Ukrainian capital were left without power early on November 11. Ukraine's air force declared an air-raid alert for the whole territory of Ukraine early on November 11.

The air force said its air defenses shot down 39 out of 74 drones launched by Russia at nine regions -- Kyiv, Zhytomyr, Poltava, Sumy, Cherkasy, Zaporizhzhya, Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, and Mykolayiv.

It said that 30 Russian drones were lost after being jammed by Ukrainian electronic-warfare systems.

Updated

Moldova Blasts 'Aggressive' Russian Drone Incursion On Its Territory

This drone was found near Borosenii Noi in Moldova on Novwember 10.
This drone was found near Borosenii Noi in Moldova on Novwember 10.

Moldova's Foreign Ministry has condemnd Russia's "aggressive" actions after two Russian drones entered Moldovan airspace and crashed on its territory on November 10. One of the drones was found by police in Borosenii Noi, a village in northern Moldova some 45 kilometers from the Ukrainian border, while the other one was located in the southern village of Firladeni, 40 kilometers from the border with Ukraine. Both were "decoy" drones used to mislead Ukrainian air defenses during attacks. "We firmly condemn these aggressive incursions and reiterate our condemnation of Russia's brutal war against Ukraine," the ministry said in a statement. Russia's Foreign Ministry "categorically" rejected the accusation, saying there was no evidence to back up the Moldovan claims. At least 15 incidents involving Russian drones have been documented by Moldova since the start of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. To read the original story by RFE/RL's Moldovan Service, click here.

Report: Trump Tells Putin In Call Not To Escalate War With Ukraine

Then-President Donald Trump (left) listens as Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at a joint press conference after a meeting in Helsinki in July 2018.
Then-President Donald Trump (left) listens as Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at a joint press conference after a meeting in Helsinki in July 2018.

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin by phone and discussed the war in Ukraine, the Washington Post reported on November 10, citing sources close to Trump.

The Post said Trump took the call in Florida on November 7, a day after speaking with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

Unnamed sources quoted by the Post said Trump told Putin not to escalate the war in Ukraine and expressed an interest in further talks on “the resolution of Ukraine’s war soon.”

Putin initially responded coolly to Trump’s big election win before informally congratulating the president-elect on November 7. He praised Trump’s “courage” in surviving an assassination attempt in July and said he was “ready” to speak to him.

People familiar with the call told the Post that Kyiv had been informed of the Putin call and did not object.

U.S., Russian, and Ukrainian officials have not commented on the report.

On the campaign trail ahead of the November 5 election, Trump claimed he would end the war in Ukraine without offering details about how he planned to do so.

Putin said in September he would like to see U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris beat Trump in the election, but observers argue that was likely part of the Kremlin’s efforts to avoid giving the impression that Putin was hoping Trump would win.

Trump has previously indicated Ukraine may have to agree to give up territory to strike a peace deal with Russia. In the same vein, Trump ally Bryan Lanza told the BBC on November 9 that the focus of Trump's government will be achieving peace in Ukraine and not enabling Kyiv to regain territory occupied by Russia.

The Washington Post report on the call came hours after Zelenskiy said Russia had fired 145 drones at Ukraine overnight, the most in any single nighttime attack since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Ukraine also launched dozens of drones targeting the Russian capital, Moscow, forcing the temporary closure of three airports on November 10.

Russian forces have been making advances in recent weeks, with Moscow saying on November 10 that it had captured the town of Voltchenka in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region.

Targeted Activist Calls Failure Of Iranian Assassination Plot 'Pleasing'

Masih Alinejad, 48, has been the target of three alleged Iranian kidnapping and assassination plots.
Masih Alinejad, 48, has been the target of three alleged Iranian kidnapping and assassination plots.

Iranian-American human rights activist Masih Alinejad says she derives joy from the failure of alleged plots by the Islamic republic to kidnap and assassinate her.

The U.S. Justice Department on November 8 unsealed criminal charges that include details of a plot allegedly backed by Iran to kill Alinejad and President-elect Donald Trump before the November 5 election. Iran has rejected the allegation.

"When the Islamic republic is defeated, disgraced, and embarrassed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation [FBI], it has no choice but to deny," Alinejad, 48, said in comments to RFE/RL's Radio Farda.

Alinejad, who has criticized Iran's laws requiring women to wear a hijab, or head scarf, was the target of a kidnapping plot in 2021. In 2022 a man was also arrested with a rifle outside her home.

“The Islamic republic has been disgraced three times…. The humiliation of [Iranian authorities] is truly pleasing,” she said.

The FBI informed Alinejad of the suspected Iranian plot to kill her shortly before the court documents were unsealed, she said, recalling that she was "shocked" to learn about the details.

Two men arrested by the FBI were planning to target Alinejad at Fairfield University in Connecticut, where she was scheduled to appear.

The Justice Department alleges the two men spent months surveilling Alinejad and earlier this year traveled to the university campus and took photos of the premises.

"It is shocking how brazenly the Islamic republic can savagely plan to assassinate someone in another country," Alinejad said.

Iran has long been accused of targeting dissidents abroad, either to kidnap them or kill them.

Rights groups say exiled opposition activist Ruhollah Zam was abducted in 2019 before being executed in Iran a year later.

In 2020, Tehran said it had arrested Iranian-German citizen Jamshid Sharmahd and later sentenced him to death. Sharmahd's family insists he was kidnapped while through the United Arab Emirates. Iranian authorities claim Sharmahd died in prison last month before being executed.

Alinejad, who is visiting Germany and recently met with President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said her message to Germany, the United States, and all Western countries is to "protect your borders and democracy instead of protecting me so that the Islamic republic's terrorists can't enter and plot assassinations on Western soil."

She said symbolic gestures by the West in support of Iranian protesters and dissidents "is not enough" to dissuade Iranian authorities from targeting critics abroad. Instead, she argued, severing diplomatic ties and "extensive support" for protesters inside Iran would be more effective.

Written based on an interview by Nasrin Afshar of RFE/RL's Radio Farda

Saudi Armed Forces General Travels to Iran In Rare High-Level Visit

Fayyad al-Ruwaili, chief of the general staff of Saudi Arabia’s armed forces, meets his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Baqeri, in Tehran on November 10.
Fayyad al-Ruwaili, chief of the general staff of Saudi Arabia’s armed forces, meets his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Baqeri, in Tehran on November 10.

The general chief of staff of Saudi Arabia's armed forces, Fayyad al-Ruwaili, met his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Baqeri, in Tehran during a rare visit on November 10.

Iran's official IRNA news agency said they discussed the development of defense diplomacy and bilateral cooperation without offering any details.

Iranian media said Baqeri had discussed regional developments and defense cooperation with Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman al-Saud last year.

Ruwaili is only the second high-profile Saudi official to travel to Tehran since Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed to restore diplomatic relations after seven years following Chinese-brokered talks in March 2023. Previously, Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan visited Iran in June 2023.

Sunni-majority Saudi Arabia severed ties with Shi'a-dominated Iran in 2016 after its diplomatic compounds in Tehran and Mashhad were attacked by protesters over Riyadh's execution of Shi'ite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.

The trip comes days after the election of Donald Trump, whose second term as U.S. president begins in January. He has pledged to bring peace to the Middle East, where U.S. ally Israel is engaged in wars against Iranian-backed groups in Gaza and Lebanon.

Hamidreza Azizi, a fellow at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, said the timing of the trip was significant because it comes as various countries are preparing for a second Trump presidency.

He said the Saudis' decision to send their top military official to Tehran "is a signal that they are committed" to the detente process that started last year and that "they don't want Trump's election to jeopardize the recently improving relations with Iran."

Separately, Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian spoke with Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman on the phone and discussed expanding bilateral relations, according to Pezeshkian's office.

Trump had good relations with Persian Gulf Arab states in his first tenure in office and worked on normalizing relations between Arab states and Iran's archfoe, Israel.

Saudi Arabia has not normalized relations with Israel but Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is said to have discussed the possibility of normalization with Saudi Arabia since 2021.

In another sign of warming relations, Saudi Arabia announced last month that it held military drills with Iran in the Sea of Oman.

Turkey Deports 325 Afghan Nationals In 48 Hours

Syrian and Afghan migrants wait after being caught by Turkish police. (file photo)
Syrian and Afghan migrants wait after being caught by Turkish police. (file photo)

Turkish authorities deported 325 Afghan migrants over the past two days, the Taliban's Refugees and Repatriations Ministry said on November 10. According to the ministry, the International Organization for Migration will provide the equivalent of 150 euros to each of the deported migrants. In recent months, Turkey has intensified raids to detain and expel Afghan migrants, most of them undocumented. About 600 Afghan nationals were detained in police raids in Istanbul in September and were transferred to detention centers. To read the original story by RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi, click here.

Taliban To Attend UN Climate Conference For First Time

An Afghan child works in a plastic recycling factory on the outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif.
An Afghan child works in a plastic recycling factory on the outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif.

The Taliban will attend a UN climate conference for the first time since their takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, the country's national environment agency said on November 10. The conference, known as COP29, begins on November 11 in Azerbaijan and is one of the most important multilateral talks to include the Taliban, who do not have official international recognition as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan. The National Environmental Protection Agency wrote on X that a technical delegation had gone to Baku to participate. Matiul Haq Khalis, the agency’s head, said the delegation would use the conference to strengthen cooperation with the international community on environmental protection and climate change, share Afghanistan’s needs regarding access to existing financial mechanisms related to climate change, and discuss adaptation and mitigation efforts.

UN Nuclear Watchdog Chief To Visit Iran On November 13

International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi
International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi

UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi will visit Iran on November 13 and start consultations with Iranian officials the following day, state media reported on November 10. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said last week that he might head to Iran in the coming days to discuss its disputed nuclear program and that he expected to work cooperatively with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump. Long-standing issues between Iran, the IAEA, and Western powers include Tehran barring several uranium-enrichment experts from IAEA inspection teams in the country and its failure for years to explain uranium traces found at undeclared sites. Iran has also stepped up nuclear activity since 2019, after then-President Trump abandoned a 2015 deal Iran reached with world powers under which it curbed enrichment -- seen by the West as a disguised effort to develop nuclear weapons capability -- and restored tough U.S. sanctions on the Islamic republic.

Updated

Russia Reportedly Suffered Record 1,500 Casualties Daily In October

A woman looks at the graves of Russian soldiers at a cemetery in Volzhsky, outside Volgograd, Russia, in May 2022. A U.K. military official says Russia is nearing 700,000 killed or wounded since the full-scale invasion began.
A woman looks at the graves of Russian soldiers at a cemetery in Volzhsky, outside Volgograd, Russia, in May 2022. A U.K. military official says Russia is nearing 700,000 killed or wounded since the full-scale invasion began.

An average of around 1,500 Russian soldiers were killed or injured per day in October -- Russia's worst month for casualties since the beginning of the invasion, according to Britain's Chief of the Defense Staff Tony Radakin.

"Russia is about to suffer 700,000 people killed or wounded -- the enormous pain and suffering that the Russian nation is having to bear because of [President Vladimir] Putin's ambition," Radakin told the BBC on November 10.

Moscow does not reveal the number of its war casualties.

Radakin claimed Moscow was spending more than 40 percent of public expenditure on defense and security, putting "an enormous strain" on the country.

Meanwhile, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed on November 10 that its forces had captured the town of Voltchenka in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, where Russian forces have been making advances in recent weeks.

Ukraine launched dozens of drones targeting Moscow, forcing the temporary closure of three of the capital's airports, Russian officials said on November 10.

Rosaviatsia, Russia's federal air transport agency, said the Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, and Zhukovo airports halted operations for several hours amid the drone strikes, one of Kyiv's largest attacks on Moscow since the war began in February 2022.

The strikes come as Russia fired 145 drones at Ukraine overnight, the most in any single nighttime attack of the conflict so far, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on November 10.

"Last night, Russia launched a record 145 Shaheds and other strike drones against Ukraine," Zelenskiy said on social media, reiterating calls on Kyiv's Western partners to increase supplies to help protect the country's skies.

Ukraine's air force said its air defense downed 62 of the Russian drones launched overnight, while a further 67 had disappeared from radar screens. Other drones had flown into the airspace of Belarus or Moldova, Ukraine's neighbors to the north and west, respectively.

At least two people were injured and buildings were damaged in the attack in southern region of Odesa, Ukrainian officials said.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Russia had downed 32 Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow overnight and in the morning of November 10.

There was no damage or casualties at the site of the fall of the debris, Sobyanin said, adding emergency services were at the site.

'Life Or Death': Drones Deliver Supplies To Ukraine's Front Line (Video)
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One person was injured in the attack, according to Moscow regional Governor Andrei Vorobyov. Media reports said the strikes caused a fire in the Ramenskoye district, with several houses in flames.

Russia reports the destruction of Ukrainian drones almost daily, but the attacks rarely target the capital.

Ukrainian authorities have maintained their drone attacks on Russia are aimed at infrastructure key to Moscow's war efforts and are in response to Russia's continued attacks on Ukraine.

Since the war began, Ukraine has been subject to nightly Russian air raids targeting critical energy infrastructure, among other things.

Ukrainian drones also targeted Russia’s Bryansk and Kaluga regions overnight, setting several nonresidential buildings on fire, regional governors reported on November 10.

A nonresidential building in Kaluga was on fire as result of Ukraine's drone attack, according to the regional governor Vladislav Shapsha. Kaluga borders the Moscow region to its northeast.

With reporting by Reuters, AFP, AP, and dpa

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