Who is Maria Lvova-Belova, the children’s rights advocate accused of war crimes alongside Putin?
The journey of Russian children’s rights commissioner from church choir singer to ICC war crime suspect

Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova could have, like her predecessor and fellow native of Russia’s Penza Anna Kuznetsova, drunk tea with the president for several years and used her own example to show how the country’s birth rate is growing.
But four months after her taking office, war broke out, and she had to take part in what the International Criminal Court classifies as child abduction. She has been reporting publicly on this for a year, so there is now an international warrant for Lvova-Belova’s arrest.
Novaya Gazeta Europe tells the story of Maria Lvova-Belova’s journey from a simple singer in a church choir to an accomplice of Vladimir Putin at the ICC.

Moscow’s territorial gains falter as world marks fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Zelensky addresses Ukrainians from Kyiv bunker on fourth anniversary of Russian invasion
Four years of hell
Putin’s misjudged effort to subjugate Ukraine has only helped cement its national identity, and it won’t ever stop fighting

Kyiv blames Russia for fatal Lviv terror attack that left police officer dead

Ukraine and Russia exchange deadly overnight energy infrastructure strikes

Zelensky accuses Putin of starting World War III when he invaded Ukraine

The artlessness of the deal
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Hungary blocks €90bn EU loan to Ukraine over Druzhba pipeline dispute

Former Belarusian presidential candidate Mikalai Statkevich released again after refusing to go into exile



