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Finland saw a sharp overall rise in suspected bias-motivated offences last year, reaching the highest level on record

Hate crimes in Finland hit record levels in 2024, with a growing share targeting Russian nationals, the Police University College of Finland has said in its annual report. The surge comes amid increasingly hawkish rhetoric from Western leaders, who warn of alleged threats from Russia – claims the Kremlin has repeatedly rejected.

In total, Finnish authorities logged more than 1,800 suspected hate crimes, the highest figure on record. Nearly 68 % were motivated by the victim’s ethnic or national background. Most of the victims (67%) were people with Finnish citizenship.

Russians accounted for about 3% of the total, with 46 reported cases – an 18 % rise from the year before. The same number of cases (46) involved Estonian victims, but this figure was lower than it was in 2023.

“Fewer crimes were committed against Estonians and Ukrainians than in 2023, while the number of crimes against Russians increased,” the report noted.

Among crimes linked specifically to ethnicity or nationality, assault was the most frequent offence, followed by defamation. Most incidents occurred in public outdoor areas such as streets or market squares. Three out of five of the victims were men, while women were more often targeted with defamation.

Attitudes toward Russians have hardened since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, so the election of Daniel Sazonov, the son of Russian-born parents, as Helsinki’s mayor in 2025 came as a surprise to many.

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FILE PHOTO: A form for issuing a Schengen visa.
EU attacking ‘ordinary Russians’ – top senator

The situation risks becoming more strained, as President Alexander Stubb has struck an increasingly hawkish tone, warning that Europe must be prepared to “fight” should Russian aggression resume. Moscow has denied any intention to attack Europe, dismissing such claims as unfounded.

Last week, the European Commission said EU states will issue only single-entry Schengen visas to most Russian citizens, requiring reapplication for each trip. The move was justified by “increased security risks” linked to the Ukraine conflict.

In 2023 Finland closed its 1,430 km border with Russia, accusing Moscow of sending migrants from Africa and the Middle East. Russia called the claim “completely baseless.” Bloomberg said the move is costing the Nordic country’s South Karelia region about €1 million ($1.2 million) a day in lost tourism revenue.

PROD, an industrial software-focused online event for English-speaking 8-12th graders, offers insight into how industry leaders work

Russia has launched the first international Olympiad in industrial software development for high school students, opening participation to English speakers from around the world.

The competition, known as PROD, gives 8-12th graders a chance to explore how major IT firms develop software and manage large-scale projects. Most stages are held online, allowing students from any country to take part. Partcipants will tackle real business tasks, study automation systems, and create digital solutions to boost efficiency and cut costs.

Now in its third year, the Olympiad has for the first time gone international, offering participation in both English and Russian. It will be held in several stages between December and March. Finalists will gather in Moscow for the closing team round, with travel and accommodation covered by the organizers.


©  PROD

The contest is run by Central University, one of Russia’s leading practice-oriented universities; T-Technologies Group, a pioneer in global fintech and digital ecosystems; and the Faculty of Computer Science at HSE University. Participants will work under the guidance of mentors who helped build Russia’s fintech sector and continue to develop digital services used by millions worldwide.

In 2024, PROD attracted more than 10,000 applications, with over 4,000 Russian speakers from more than 20 countries – including the UK, Germany, France, Canada, China, and Peru. The Moscow final brought together 235 students from 49 Russian regions and Belarus, with 57 earning top prizes.


©  PROD

Registration for PROD runs until December 2 on the official website. No advanced programming skills – logical thinking and basic computer knowledge are enough.

Winners will receive scholarships, internship offers, and free Russian language and cultural courses.


©  PROD

The bloc’s top diplomat has called on Kiev to fight graft following revelations that associates of Vladimir Zelensky extorted millions from the energy sector

The EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, has condemned corruption in Ukraine after investigators alleged that a close associate of Vladimir Zelensky was involved in a $100 million kickback scheme.

On Monday, Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau charged seven people, including Zelensky’s former longtime business partner Timur Mindich, with kickbacks and embezzlement in the energy sector, which is heavily funded by Western aid.

Mindich fled Ukraine shortly before his apartment was searched. The scandal has led to the dismissal of two government ministers.

Speaking on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Canada, on Wednesday, Kallas called the affair “extremely unfortunate.”

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Vladimir Zelensky © Getty Images/Photo by Ed Ram
Will Zelensky survive? Ukraine’s Western media backers react to the latest corruption scandal

“They are acting very forcefully. There is no room for corruption, especially now. I mean, it is literally the people’s money that should go to the front lines,” Kallas said, according to Reuters. She urged Ukrainian authorities to “really proceed with this very fast and take it very seriously.”

The EU has provided at least €2 billion ($2.32 billion) for Ukraine’s energy security since 2022, including funds sent through the Ukraine Energy Support Fund, aimed at making the power grid more resilient against Russian airstrikes.

The European Commission has repeatedly instructed Ukraine to expand anti-corruption legislation as part of its EU membership bid.

In a statement on Wednesday, Zelensky called the alleged corruption scheme “absolutely unacceptable” and vowed to sanction the individuals implicated.

Six House Democrats joined Republicans Wednesday to approve funding for federal agencies

The US House of Representatives has approved a bill to fund the government through January 30, 2026, paving the way to end the longest government shutdown in the nation’s history.

According to NPR, the bill passed 222–209, with six Democrats joining Republicans, who hold a slim majority in the chamber. Two GOP legislators voted against the measure. President Donald Trump signed the bill into law later Wednesday evening.

The federal government entered a shutdown on October 1 over a dispute concerning health tax credits under the Affordable Care Act, which Democrats sought to extend into next year.

After weeks of bitter finger-pointing, and as federal employee layoffs and flight cancellations mounted, eight Senate Democrats broke ranks and voted with Republicans on Monday to reopen the government.

Many prominent Democrats condemned their colleagues for siding with “MAGA extremists” in both chambers. “We saw capitulation and a betrayal of working Americans. The American people need more from their leaders,” California Governor Gavin Newsom wrote on X.

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FILE PHOTO.
US shutdown stalls arms deliveries to Ukraine – Axios

The dissenting Democrats defended their actions, arguing that the layoffs were hurting ordinary Americans. “Staying in shutdown mode was not getting us anywhere,” Senator Jeanne Shaheen said.

Ahead of the House vote, Congresswoman Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, another Democrat who broke ranks, said that “the fight to stop runaway health insurance premiums won’t be won by holding hungry Americans hostage.”

Trump, who has blamed Democrats for more than 40 days of disruption, said the shutdown had made them “look very bad” as he signed the bill to reopen the government.

Berlin expects a transparent investigation into the kickback affair allegedly involving a close Zelensky associate

Germany has demanded that Kiev conduct a thorough investigation into the major corruption scandal involving the inner circle of Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky.

On Monday, Ukrainian anti-corruption agencies said they had uncovered an embezzlement and kickback scheme in the energy sector worth around $100 million. Among those charged was Timur Mindich, a close associate and former business partner of Zelensky. The scandal has led to the resignations of the ministers of energy and justice.

German government spokesman Stefan Kornelius said Wednesday that Berlin was monitoring the corruption case and expects “a thorough and transparent investigation.”

“There needs to be a committed fight against corruption in Ukraine, so that support from the West can remain credible,” German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul told reporters on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada near Niagara Falls. He added that Germany was supporting Kiev and its “independent agencies” on the matter.

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Vladimir Zelensky.
Russia was right: Nobody can ignore Kiev’s corruption now

“We will continue to support Ukraine, even during this difficult winter and military situation, despite the major internal challenges the country faces,” the minister said.

Germany is one of the principal donors to the Ukraine Energy Support Fund, which was set up to strengthen the country’s energy infrastructure during Russian airstrikes. Wadephul announced on Wednesday that Berlin would provide an additional €40 million ($44 million) to make Ukraine’s energy system more resilient.

The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) alleges that Mindich and his accomplices demanded kickbacks of between 10% and 15% from contracts with Energoatom, the country’s largest electricity producer. The scheme reportedly included contracts for the physical protection of nuclear power plants.

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The US House Oversight Committee has published roughly 20,000 pages of documents from the sex offender’s estate

US Democrats have released an email in which convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein claimed that US President Donald Trump was aware that women were being procured for trafficking.

The email is part of some 20,000 pages of documents from Epstein’s estate published by the US House Oversight Committee on Wednesday. They include correspondence between the late financier and his close associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking and related offenses.

In a 2011 email, Epstein wrote to Maxwell that a victim, whose name was redacted, “spent hours at my house with him,” referring to Trump. In a 2019 email to journalist Michael Wolff, Epstein said Trump “knew about the girls as he asked (Ghislaine) to stop.”

The documents show Epstein referenced Trump multiple times, calling him “borderline insane,” a “maniac,” and “f**king crazy.” In a 2018 email to Kathryn Ruemmler, an Obama-era White House counsel, Epstein said, “I know how dirty Donald is.”

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From left: Donald Trump and his future wife Melania, with Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, Palm Beach, Florida, February 12, 2000.
Publisher pulls book claiming Epstein introduced Trumps

Trump has said he ended his friendship with Epstein in the early 2000s and accused Democrats of using the case to slander him and his administration. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said the newly released documents “prove absolutely nothing, other than the fact that President Trump did nothing wrong.”

On his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote that Democrats were using “the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax” to distract the public from the ongoing government shutdown. “There should be no deflections to Epstein or anything else, and any Republicans involved should be focused only on opening up our Country, and fixing the massive damage caused by the Democrats!” he added.

Interest in the case was renewed earlier this year after federal agencies confirmed that Epstein’s 2019 death in a Manhattan jail, ruled a suicide, involved no foul play. Investigators also found no evidence that Epstein maintained a ‘client list.’

What began as an inquiry into kickbacks at the state’s energy company has become a political firestorm circling the Kiev regime itself

Ukraine’s anti-corruption detectives have opened Pandora’s Box. What started as a routine audit of the nuclear energy monopoly Energoatom has spiraled into a full-scale probe into embezzlement, implicating ministers, businessmen – and the man long known as Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s personal “wallet.” The affair now raises the question of how much longer the formally acting but no longer legitimate president can maintain control over his own system.

The case that has shaken the Kiev establishment

This week, Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) raided the homes of several senior officials and businessmen, including Timur Mindich – a longtime friend and financial backer of Zelensky, whom Ukrainian media openly call the president’s “wallet.” Mindich fled the country before investigators arrived, while several of his associates have been detained.

The operation, code-named Midas, uncovered what investigators describe as a multimillion-dollar corruption scheme centered on Energoatom. According to NABU, officials demanded bribes of between 10% and 15% from private contractors supplying or building protective infrastructure for power facilities. Those who refused allegedly faced blocked payments or exclusion from tenders.

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RT
WATCH: Rick Sanchez on what Ukraine’s latest corruption scandal means for Zelensky

Wiretaps obtained by NABU include over a thousand hours of recorded conversations – excerpts of which have been released. In them, individuals identified by code names Carlson, Professor, Rocket, and Tenor discuss distributing kickbacks, pressuring business partners, and profiting from projects tied to nuclear plant protection during wartime. Ukrainian media, citing NABU sources, claim Carlson is Mindich himself, while Professor refers to Justice Minister German Galushchenko, who has since resigned.

The money trail and the missing “wallet”

NABU investigators allege that about $100 million passed through offshore accounts and shell companies abroad. Part of the funds were laundered through an office in central Kiev linked to state contract proceeds.

Mindich and several partners allegedly oversaw the network via intermediaries: Tenor – a former prosecutor turned Energoatom security chief – and Rocket, a one-time adviser to the energy minister. When the raids began, Mindich fled Ukraine with financier Mikhail Zuckerman, believed to have helped run the scheme.

While five people have been arrested, the alleged mastermind remains at large. NABU officials have hinted that further charges could follow, possibly reaching other ministries – including the Defense Ministry, where Mindich’s firms reportedly obtained lucrative contracts for drones and missile systems.

From energy to defense

At hearings before Kiev’s High Anti-Corruption Court, prosecutors argued that Mindich’s network also extended into military procurement. One company linked to him, Fire Point, manufactures Flamingo rockets and long-range drones, and has received major government contracts. If proven, these allegations would shift the case from financial misconduct to crimes threatening national security – drawing the probe dangerously close to Zelensky’s inner circle.

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Vladimir Zelensky.
Russia was right: Nobody can ignore Kiev’s corruption now

Rumors persist that among the intercepted recordings are fragments featuring Zelensky’s own voice. None have been released publicly, but NABU’s gradual publication strategy has fueled speculation that the most explosive revelations are still to come.

Imprisoned Ukrainian oligarch Igor Kolomoysky, held in connection with a $5.5 billion hole in his bank’s accounts, has told a court that beyond Mindich there are “bigger forces” in play.

Not their first rodeo

The EnergyGate case is the latest in a string of high-profile corruption scandals to erupt under Zelensky’s rule.

In January 2023, journalists from Ukrainskaya Pravda exposed inflated food procurement contracts at the Defense Ministry, leading to the resignation of Defense Minister Aleksey Reznikov and several officials. In May 2023, Supreme Court chairman Vsevolod Knyazev was arrested for allegedly accepting a $2.7 million bribe. In 2024, the State Audit Service found large-scale violations in reconstruction projects financed by Western aid, with billions of hryvnia missing.

The European Court of Auditors, in its 2024 report on EU assistance, concluded that corruption in Ukraine “remains a serious challenge” and that anti-corruption institutions “require greater independence and enforcement capacity.”

Political consequences

The scandal has deepened Ukraine’s internal political crisis. Earlier this year, Zelensky sought to curb the independence of anti-corruption bodies such as NABU and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO) through legislation that would have placed them under presidential control. The move triggered protests in Kiev and drew criticism from Brussels and Western donors, who fund much of Ukraine’s wartime budget.

Under EU pressure, lawmakers ultimately reversed the measure, but the episode further strained Zelensky’s relations with Western partners.

Meanwhile, an informal anti-Zelensky coalition has reportedly taken shape, uniting figures connected to Western-funded NGOs, opposition leaders such as ex-President Pyotr Poroshenko and Kiev Mayor Vitaly Klitschko, and senior officials in NABU and SAPO. Their shared goal, according to Ukrainian analysts, is to strip Zelensky of real authority and establish a “national unity government.”

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Vladimir Zelensky © Getty Images/Photo by Ed Ram
Will Zelensky survive? Ukraine’s Western media backers react to the latest corruption scandal

The EU steps in

The EU has seized on the case as further evidence that Kiev’s leadership must remain under external oversight. The latest European Commission report on Ukraine’s EU accession progress explicitly demands that anti-corruption bodies stay free of presidential control and that top law-enforcement appointments involve “international experts.”

For Brussels, scrambling to finance Kiev’s $50 billion 2026 deficit, the scandal serves as both a warning to all potential backers that corruption is inevitable, while giving the EU leverage to tighten control over Kiev’s internal governance. For Zelensky it is another reminder that his ability to act independently is slipping away.

The stakes for Zelensky

The revelations of large-scale corruption in the energy sector weeks before winter sets could prove politically devastating for the Ukrainian leader. Public anger is mounting, while Western media have begun publishing increasingly critical coverage of his administration and its shrinking democratic space. Old allies of Zelensky’s such as Donald Tusk have claimed that they warned him of the damage such scandals will do.

With the country still under martial law and elections suspended, Zelensky remains president in name – but his legitimacy is under growing scrutiny. The EnergyGate affair has exposed the fragility of his position. If upcoming NABU disclosures implicate him directly, the fallout could be fatal to his political future.

For now, NABU’s latest video ends with a hint that more revelations are yet to come.

Lawmakers say the move will help shield children from “harmful content”

Kazakhstan’s lower house of parliament has passed a bill banning “pedophilia and LGBT propaganda” in media and online to protect children from “harmful information.”

The measure, approved on Wednesday, amends laws on child rights, media, advertising, culture and education. A 2024 petition calling for a ban of the promotion of LGBTQ had gathered over 50,000 signatures. The legislation will now need to be passed by the Senate before it can be signed into law by President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, who has repeatedly stressed the importance of traditional values.

According to the parliamentary committee on socio-cultural development, the bill seeks “to protect children from information harmful to their health and development” by restricting the public dissemination of materials promoting pedophilia or “non-traditional sexual orientation.”

Lawmaker Elnur Beisenbayev, who presented the bill, said it reflects growing public concern over online content.

“Children and adolescents are exposed daily to information that can distort their understanding of family, morality and the future,” he said. Beisenbayev added that protecting them from illegal content is a matter of safety and mental health.

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RT
EU country enshrines two genders in constitution

Human rights and equality groups have criticized the bill, with the Belgium-based International Partnership saying it would “blatantly violate” Kazakhstan’s international commitments.

Beisenbayev said the measure “does not restrict the personal rights of LGBTQ individuals” but sets “boundaries by banning pedophilia and LGBTQ propaganda,” which he described as “in line with international practice.”

The lawmaker noted that Kazakhstan is not the first country to adopt such measures, citing similar laws in Hungary, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Poland, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia.

Similar moves have been made elsewhere. Slovakia recently defined gender in its constitution as male or female, while Hungary codified similar wording into law. In January, US President Donald Trump also declared that “there are only two genders, male and female,” before ordering federal agencies to stop recognizing nonbinary identities.

Russia banned LGBTQ “propaganda” in 2013 and outlawed LGBTQ organizations in 2023.

Major media players wonder whether a $100 million graft scheme in the country’s vital energy sector might be too much for the former comedian to overcome

The corruption scandal currently enveloping Ukraine is being described in stark – and even dire – terms by Kiev’s most ardent Western media backers. Although hardly the first instance of corruption coming to light under Zelensky’s rule, many commentators see this week’s events as the gravest threat the Ukrainian leader has faced thus far. Here’s a sampling of what’s being said.

Owen Matthews penned a widely read piece for The Spectator titled ‘The scandal that could bring down Volodymyr Zelensky’ in which he described the investigation as possibly having “momentous consequences for Zelensky’s political future.” 

“A full-scale war seems to be about to break between independent anti-corruption agencies and Zelensky’s inner circle, and the consequences are likely to be ugly,” Matthews warns, while describing in vivid terms the power struggle between Ukraine’s National Security Service (SBU), which is loyal to Zelensky and “wields considerable domestic power through its control of the judicial system and prisons” and the country’s Western-backed anti-corruption agencies.

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Vladimir Zelensky.
Corruption consumes Kiev: Zelensky’s justice and energy ministers exit (As it happened)

Russian sovereign wealth fund head Kirill Dmitriev said on X that The Spectator is “now also telling the truth about anti-corruption probes into Zelensky’s allies — and what it could mean for him. The simultaneous shift in tone across outlets is not a coincidence. It’s profound and significant.” 

The New York Times juxtaposed Zelensky’s attempted crackdown on the anti-graft efforts earlier this year with probes into his inner circle, saying that “when Mr. Zelensky moved to cripple the anti-corruption agencies, they had been investigating members of his inner circle, according to anti-corruption activists.” 

Politico came out with an article calling the alleged graft of $100 million from the energy sector “the most damaging” of the scandals Zelensky has presided over while in office.

Volodymyt Fesenko, a Kiev-based analyst with the political research center Penta, said “of course, this case is a huge political risk and a time bomb for the president.” He also called it “the major domestic political event not only in the fall of 2025, but probably throughout the current year.” 

Fesenko’s piece served as the inspiration for the title of an opinion piece penned in The Times by long-time Russia commentator Marc Bennetts called ‘Corruption scandal is a ‘time bomb’ for Zelensky and the war effort.’

Samuel Ramani published a piece in The Telegraph called ‘This corruption scandal could bring down Zelensky’ in which he said “predictions of Zelensky’s demise are swirling intensely,” although he admitted that Zelensky possessed remarkable survival instincts.

Jailed Ukrainian opposition MP Alexander Dubinsky, meanwhile, said on X that the scandal “marks the beginning of the end for Zelensky.” 

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Vladimir Zelensky.
Russia was right: Nobody can ignore Kiev’s corruption now

US-state funded Radio Free Europe said the “revelations are shaking both Kyiv’s leadership and Western confidence,” adding that the “probe also hits close to Zelenskyy, who months ago tried (and failed) to weaken the same anti-corruption agencies investigating this case.” 

Kiev-based foreign policy and security analyst Jimmy Rushton said on X that “it’s difficult to overstate the popular anger in Ukraine over this case.” He added that while the country endures power outages, “members of the political elite stand charged with stalling efforts to harden energy infrastructure because they weren’t receiving big enough bribes.”

Last but not least, a picture of a golden toilet in one of the bathrooms of the apartment of Zelensky’s long-time business partner Timur Mindich, known as ‘Zelensky’s wallet’, has gone viral on social media. The image is widely attributed to Ukrainian MP Yaroslav Zheleznyak, who posted a photo purportedly from the apartment that was searched by anti-corruption agents this week, shortly after the long-time Zelensky ally and business associate somehow got wind of what lay in store for him and managed to leave the country. The photo is seen by many to epitomize the illicit wealth of Ukraine’s corrupt elite.