
Kremlin slams Azerbaijan's detention of Russian journalists
Moscow and Baku been been embroiled in a spat after two ethnic Azerbaijanis died over the weekend following Russian police raids targeted at the diaspora in Yekaterinburg in a decades-old criminal case.
The incident sparked outcry in Baku, which has since detained three Russian journalists in a raid on the Sputnik state-run news agency and cancelled all Russian cultural events.
'We count on this highly emotional response being replaced by direct communication in which all questions will be answered,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
He said Russia expected the journalists to be released 'as quickly as possible', and called the arrests 'absolutely inconsistent with the common norms and rules.'
Relations between the ex-Soviet nations have been frosty since 38 people were killed in an Azerbaijan Airlines crash last December. Baku said the plane was hit by a Russian anti-aircraft missile.
Azerbaijani prosecutors on Tuesday opened a criminal case into alleged torture and deliberate murder of the two who died in custody in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg after their bodies were delivered to Baku for autopsies.
Russia said one person died due to a heart attack during the raid and that the other death was still under investigation.
Both countries -- which rights groups say rank among the world's worst for press freedom -- summoned each other's ambassadors for dressing downs amid the row.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
China says Premier Li to visit Brazil for BRICS summit and Egypt
BEIJING: Chinese Premier Li Qiang will visit Brazil for a meeting of BRICS countries and then Egypt next week, Beijing's foreign ministry said on Wednesday. 'Li Qiang will attend the 17th BRICS Summit upon invitation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from July 5 to 8,' a foreign ministry spokesperson said in a statement. Beijing and Moscow have hailed the BRICS club as a counterweight to what they see as Western hegemony on the world stage. A loose grouping of countries named after founding members Brazil, Russia, India and China, its members pledge to boost trade and cooperation, though it is not a trade pact and has few institutional ties. The Kremlin said last week, however, that President Vladimir Putin would not travel to Brazil for the upcoming summit due to the outstanding International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant on the Russian president. Following his visit to Brazil, Li will then 'pay an official visit to Egypt from July 9 to 10', Beijing said. Beijing has sought to frame itself as a mediator in the Middle East, facilitating a 2023 rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran and portraying itself as a more neutral actor in the Israel-Palestinian conflict than its rival the United States.


Malaysiakini
2 hours ago
- Malaysiakini
Dalai Lama says will have successor after death
The institute of the Dalai Lama will endure, Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama and the spiritual leader of Tibet, said on Wednesday, reported Sputnik/RIA Novosti. Since 1959, Gyatso has lived in exile, with Chinese authorities labelling him a separatist and accusing him of inciting unrest in Tibet during the 1980s and 2008.


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Lithuania charges three with defacing anti-Soviet monument
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -A Lithuanian prosecutor said on Wednesday he had charged three people with defacing a monument to an anti-Soviet resistance leader in January 2024, and that Russian intelligence was the main organiser behind the act. Prosecutor Rimas Bradunas told a press conference two of the three charged are dual Estonian-Russian citizens, while one is a Russian citizen. When asked at the press conference about any involvement of Russia's GRU military intelligence agency in the act, Bradunas said: "That was the main organizer, without doubt, yes". Two of the three detained were arrested in Estonia and handed over to Lithuania, he said. (Reporting by Andrius Sytas, writing by Louise Breusch Rasmussen, editing by Anna Ringstrom)