
Gunshots, luxury cars and expensive watches as youngest Kadyrov son marries in Chechnya — Novaya Gazeta Europe
In video footage of the wedding available on social media, Kadyrov is seen firing a gun into the air while driving a green, limited-edition STRONGER THAN THE 1980s Mercedes-Benz G-Class, independent investigative outlet The Insider said. Only 460 models have ever been produced in three colours, with Kadyrov opting for Agave Green. In Germany, the SUVs sell for about €160,000. The EU banned the export of premium cars, including Mercedes-Benz models, to Russia back in 2022.
In the same video, Kadyrov can be seen sporting a Jacob&Co Billionaire Ashoka model watch encrusted with diamonds, according to Pevchikh, the head of the FBK's investigative department. Depending on the spec, the watches can cost anywhere from €2.5 million to €17 million.
Kadyrov's official wedding was scheduled to be held on Friday, though social media posts from his sister Aishat Kadyrova suggest the celebrations took place on Saturday and Sunday. Kadyrova's social media posts reveal that the bride is called Medni.
On Saturday, Ramzan Kadyrov said on his Telegram channel that Vladimir Putin had sent his personal best wishes to Adam. On the same day, Chechen National Policy Minister Akmed Dudaev reported that Putin had met with Adam in the Kremlin, calling it 'another clear demonstration of the special and profound respect' of the Russian leader towards the Kadyrov family and praising Adam's leadership qualities.
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Novaya Gazeta Europe
2 hours ago
- Novaya Gazeta Europe
At least four dead in overnight Russian airstrikes on eastern Ukraine — Novaya Gazeta Europe
Ukrainian rescuers fight a fire following a Russian drone strike on the Kharkiv region city of Chuhuiv, Ukraine, 5 July 2025. Photo: State Emergency Service of Ukraine. The Russian military launched a barrage of fresh airstrikes on cities in Ukraine's eastern Kharkiv region overnight on Friday, killing at least one person in the city of Kupyansk and injuring 15 others across the region, Kharkiv Governor Oleh Synyehubov announced on Saturday. The attack, which, according to Synyehubov, comprised at least 25 Iranian-made Shahed drones, 12 unguided aircraft missiles, and 6 cruise missiles, caused widespread damage to civilian infrastructure, and was part of a larger overnight attack on Ukraine. The Ukrainian Air Force reported on Saturday that in total Russia had launched 322 drones at targets in the country, primarily targeting western Ukraine's Khmelnytskyi region, 292 of which were shot down or intercepted. Elsewhere in Ukraine, at least three civilians were killed and another 22 injured over the past 24 hours, according to reports from regional governors. In eastern Ukraine, Donetsk Governor Vadym Filashkin announced that two civilians had been killed and four wounded in Russian airstrikes on the region on Friday, while in southeastern Ukraine, Zaporizhzhia Governor Ivan Fedorov reported that a guided aerial bomb had killed an 84-year-old man in the city of Vasylivka. In an attack that was primarily concentrated on regions bordering Ukraine in western and southwestern Russia, 94 Ukrainian drones were intercepted overnight on Friday, according to the Russian Defence Ministry. No casualties were reported, although NASA's global fire monitoring system detected a blaze near the Borisoglebsk military airfield in western Russia's Voronezh region, according to breaking news Telegram channel ASTRA. Later on Saturday, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine confirmed a 'successful' strike on the airfield, claiming that Ukrainian drones had hit a warehouse storing guided aerial bombs and training aircraft. 'The Defence Forces continue to take all measures to undermine the capabilities of the Russian occupiers to strike civilian infrastructure and force Russia to cease its armed aggression against Ukraine,' it said.


Novaya Gazeta Europe
2 hours ago
- Novaya Gazeta Europe
Trump signals willingness to resume Patriot missile deliveries to Ukraine after ‘good' call with Zelensky
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Novaya Gazeta Europe
2 hours ago
- Novaya Gazeta Europe
Patriot Games. Can Ukraine replace the crucial weaponry the Trump administration has stopped supplying it with? — Novaya Gazeta Europe
The Pentagon's decision to freeze the deliveries of certain types of weapons to Ukraine, including missiles for Patriot air defence systems, caught Kyiv off guard earlier this week. Multiple NBC News sources in the US Congress and the Pentagon said that Ukraine would no longer be receiving Howitzer munitions, Hellfire missiles, precision-guided missile systems, Stinger surface-to-air missiles, AIM air-to-air missiles or grenade launchers. Experts consider these weapons to be crucial for Ukraine's defence against Russian missiles. 'I don't want to sound too conspiratorial, but the list of weapons seems to contain the munitions that are hardest to replace elsewhere,' military researcher Kirill Mikhailov told Novaya Gazeta Europe. 'First and foremost, we're talking about GMLRS missiles, which can destroy targets with a high level of precision up to 60 kilometres away, and Patriot PAC-3 anti-aircraft missiles, which are the only ones in the Ukrainian arsenal capable of shooting down ballistic missiles,' he added. 'Suspending the supply of Patriot missiles is effectively an invitation to the Russian army to strike unprotected Ukrainian cities with ballistic missiles.' Even if these munitions can be partially replaced by European supplies, some shortfall is inevitable, Mikhailov believes. But when it comes to air defences, most Russian airstrikes use drones, which can be successfully shot down by European air defence systems, aviation and interceptor drones, which Ukraine is actively investing in, he notes. The Pentagon's decision appears to concern the final supplies approved during the Biden administration, military expert and reserve Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) colonel Roman Svitan told Novaya Europe, noting that the AFU was 'really counting on this batch … of mainly defensive weapons'. 'It will weaken Ukrainian defence and air defence capabilities,' Svitan asserted. 'Suspending the supply of Patriot missiles is effectively an invitation to the Russian army to strike unprotected Ukrainian cities with ballistic missiles — only the Patriot system can shoot down Russian Iskander and Kinzhal missiles and Korean KN-23s,' he stressed. F-16 fighter jets fly over a Patriot air defence system, Ukraine, 4 August 2024. Photo: Efrem Lukatsky / AP Photo / Scanpix / LETA 'European air defence systems can only shoot down cruise missiles,' Ivan Stupak, a military analyst and former Ukrainian secret service official, agreed. Svitan believes European countries still have stockpiles of Patriot missiles, which Ukraine now hopes they will deliver. EU countries can also provide the AFU with artillery shells. Besides the Patriot systems, other interruptions in supply are not as critical, Stupak believes. In recent years, Ukraine has increasingly replaced artillery shells and anti-tank grenade launchers with drones, he notes. Drones fly further than munition, and are much more accurate. Anticipating an interruption in US aid, Ukraine ramped up production of its own shells, while also buying up Soviet-era shells, which are still widely used by the AFU. 'The fact that supplies haven't been cancelled, only suspended, may mean this is a bargaining chip in a bigger game.' 'Stopping supplies will directly lead to the death of Ukrainian servicemen and civilians, of course, but not to the immediate collapse of the front or the destruction of cities in the Ukrainian hinterland,' Mikhailov said. 'I think we have just witnessed a deal. Donald Trump received a promise from Putin not to meddle in the conflict between the US and Israel and Iran if the US stopped supplying weapons to Ukraine,' said Svitan. 'Ukraine is being sacrificed for a solution to the problems in the Middle East.' Trump may also be trying to put pressure on Kyiv again, forcing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to surrender, Svitan suggested. 'The fact that supplies haven't been cancelled, only suspended, may mean this is a bargaining chip in a bigger game,' he continued. 'Trump still hopes that he can achieve peace by sacrificing large parts of Ukraine.'