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Latvia logs 111 straight days of migrants pushed across from Belarus—and blames its support for Ukraine

latvia logs 111 straight days migrants pushed across belarus—and blames its support ukraine · post fence along latvia's border belarus vnī lsm žogs uz latvijas robežas news ukrainian reports

Latvia's frontier with Belarus has not gone a single day without an attempted illegal crossing since late March, according to Radio Svaboda, RFE/RL's Belarusian service. The country's border service ties the sustained pressure to a state-run hybrid campaign, and its chief has named Latvia's support for Ukraine among the reasons the country has become the primary target.

Russia and its closest ally, Belarus, probe the EU's eastern edge with tools short of open war — migrants funneled to the fence, balloons drifting into airspace, prompting border closures. The campaign forces the targeted state to spend heavily on fences, troops, and border surveillance.

An unbroken run since March

Latvia's State Border Guard has logged migrant crossing attempts from Belarus for 111 consecutive days, a Pozirk analysis of the agency's operational data found. Radio Svaboda reported the tally on 15 July.

Between 25 March and 13 July, officers recorded 7,791 attempts — an average of 70 a day. In winter the traffic was a fraction of that. From 1 January to 24 March, a span of 83 days, the agency counted just 141 attempts, or 1.7 a day. Pozirk calculated a year-to-date total of 7,932, or about 41 daily, while Latvia's State Border Guard listed 7,933.

On 13 July, the entire EU-Belarus frontier saw 42 attempts, 41 of them on the Latvian line and one on the Polish. The day before brought 41, then 87 on 11 July and 103 on 10 July, with Latvia taking the bulk each time. Lithuania has seen no crossing activity for five days.

Across the bloc's Belarus border, neighboring states logged 9,116 attempts since January. Latvia absorbed 87% of them. Lithuania took 9.9%, or 904, and Poland 3.1%, or 280.

Two migrants with obscured faces pose alongside a Belarusian soldier in camouflage uniform inside a military transport vehicle, all making hand gestures
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Latvia exposes Belarusian military’s direct role in weaponizing migration

Riga's border chief points to its stance on Ukraine

Latvia is the number-one target in a hybrid war unleashed by the Belarusian authorities, State Border Guard head Guntis Pujāts told Delfi. The situation at the border, he said, presents serious challenges.

Pujāts said the migrant smugglers have grown more aggressive, pushing officers toward harsher detention methods and a need for wider support from the National Armed Forces. Border guards stopped roughly 7,600 people from crossing illegally this year, far more than in the same period of 2025.He said one of the causes of such pressure is Latvia's consistent support for Ukraine and its condemnation of Russian aggression. 

A campaign running since 2021

Neighboring EU states treat the flow as a hybrid attack organized by the regimes in Minsk and Moscow. Lukashenka has repeatedly said Belarusian guards will not stop migrants heading for the bloc through his country.

The crisis began in 2021, when thousands of people from Asian and African countries started crossing from Belarus into Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland in an organized way. It has continued at varying intensity since, and dozens of migrants have died along these borders.

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Germany spent years weaning itself off Russian energy. AfD’s Weidel wants to turn back after more than decade of Russia killing Ukrainians

pro-russian afd party classified right-wing extremist german intelligence alice weidel co-chairwoman far-right alternative germany (afd) 74c05686-24cc-4402-82b0-11b6c28a122a (2) germany’s federal office protection constitution (bfv) has officially organization decision announced 2 marks

Alternative for Germany (AfD) leader Alice Weidel pledged to end Germany's boycott of Russian oil and restore ties with Moscow if she becomes Chancellor. Her statements came ahead of two East German state elections in September that her party is currently expected to win, and after over 12 years of the war Russia has waged against Ukraine, Reuters reports

Weidel's pitch positions cheap Russian oil and gas as the centerpiece of an AfD recovery plan. She told Reuters she sees AfD in the Chancellery "either at the next elections or the ones after," with September votes in Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania as the springboard.

The AfD currently leads polls in both East German states. The party also remains under-documented scrutiny by German intelligence for pro-Russia ties.

In Germany, the AfD has embraced pro-Kremlin positions, including calls to restart Russia's Nord Stream gas pipelines, refusal to condemn Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, and demands to end military aid to Kyiv. 
Weidel ties Russian energy revival to German economic recovery

"The loss of this energy set us back by years. Hundreds of thousands of jobs were lost. It made us dependent on the US, which sells us energy at much higher prices," Weidel said.

The AfD leader's framing reverses Berlin's official position that Russian energy dependency was the strategic vulnerability the country needed to eliminate after Russia's 2022 war against Ukraine.

Germany's pre-war reliance on Russian gas, around 55% of total gas imports, was repeatedly named by federal officials as the cause of Berlin's slow initial response to the war.

Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania as path to Chancellery

Weidel told Reuters that the AfD victory in the September state elections would be a milestone on the path to national governance.

"If we win in Saxony-Anhalt, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania will likely follow. I see Alternative for Germany in the Chancellery either at the next elections or the ones after," she said.

AfD remains under intelligence scrutiny for pro-Russia ties

Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) officially classified the AfD as a right-wing extremist organization in May 2025, though the classification was suspended pending a court challenge, per Euromaidan Press. AfD lawmakers have separately been suspected of feeding sensitive Bundeswehr data to Russian intelligence. 

In April 2026, the AfD endorsed the restoration of Russian-language teaching in German schools, per UNIAN.

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Moldova's pro-Russian political bloc to participate in upcoming elections

Moldova's pro-Russian political bloc to participate in upcoming elections

Moldova's Victory bloc, a pro-Russian political alliance, plans to participating in the country's September parliamentary elections, the bloc's founder Ilan Shor announced on July 6.

Shor, an exiled pro-Kremlin oligarch, established the Victory bloc in August 2024. The bloc includes his own Shor party, which is banned in Moldova.

Victory will submit documents in the coming days registering the bloc for participation in the September vote, Shor said.

"Our main goal in these elections is to overthrow the fascist regime and hold early democratic elections within the next six months," Shor said.

The candidate list will be headed by Evghenia Gutul, the head of Moldova's Gagauzia region, who is currently on trial for illegally funding the banned Shor party. Gutul maintains ties to Moscow and is currently under U.S. sanctions.

The upcoming September elections carry high stakes for Moldova, one of the pooerest countries in Europe. Moldovan President Maia Sandu said on July 4 that Chisinau's European path rests on the outcome of the vote.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen pledged on July 4 that the European Union will help Moldova defend itself against hybrid threats by "agents of autocracy" as elections approach.

Moldova was granted EU candidate status in 2022. Sandu's ruling Party of Action and Solidarity aims to maintain its parliamentary majority and move the country closer to full membership by 2030.

Ukraine war latest: Drones attack Russia’s Black Sea Fleet; Russian pipelines explode in country’s Far East, HUR says
Key developments on July 5-6: * Drones reportedly attack Russia’s Black Sea fleet * Pipelines supplying Russian military explode in Russia’s Far East, HUR source says * Ukrainian drone strike on Russian airfield hits bomb depot, aircraft * Ukraine hits Russian electronic warfare facility making Shahed, Iskander components, General Staff says * Ukraine’s army chief warns of new Russian offensives in northeast as he visits Kharkiv Oblast front Drones attacked Russia’s Black Sea Fleet at the
Moldova's pro-Russian political bloc to participate in upcoming electionsThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
Moldova's pro-Russian political bloc to participate in upcoming elections

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Musk launches 'America Party' following public feud with Trump

Musk launches 'America Party' following public feud with Trump

Weeks after a high-profile public falling out with U.S. President Donald Trump, tech mogul Elon Musk announced the creation of a new political party in the United States, dubbed the "America Party."

Musk said on July 5 that the party's aim is to "give you back your freedom" and challenge the traditional two-party Republican and Democratic system.

The announcement came a day after Trump signed his sweeping tax cut and spending bill into law, a legislative act that Musk has fiercely opposed. It remains unclear if the America Party has been formally registered with election authorities, but Musk indicated it would launch "next year."

Musk's decision follows a poll he conducted on X on July 4, asking his followers if he should create a new political party.He cited the overwhelming support, writing: "By a factor of 2 to 1, you want a new political party and you shall have it! When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy."

The strained relationship between Musk and Trump began to deteriorate significantly after a period where Musk publicly supported Trump's re-election bid and held a high-profile role in the U.S. government's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

In May, Musk announced his departure from DOGE, citing the end of his "scheduled time." Initially, Trump praised him as "one of the greatest business leaders and innovators the world has ever produced."

However, tensions escalated sharply on May 22 after the U.S. House of Representatives passed the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," a significant tax-cut and spending bill that Trump signed into law on Friday.

Musk vehemently condemned the legislation, calling it a "massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination." He argued that the bill's spending would exacerbate the "already gigantic budget deficit" and "burden American citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt."

Adding to the friction earlier this week, Trump threatened to cut off billions of dollars in federal subsidies to Musk's companies and even hinted at the possibility of deporting the South Africa-born entrepreneur.

‘Disingenuous’ Hegseth paused Ukraine weapons despite Pentagon finding aid wouldn’t hurt US readiness, NBC reports
A senior military review had concluded that while some munitions stockpiles, including precision weapons, were low, they had not fallen below critical thresholds, according to NBC. Still, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth opted to stop the shipment. This is reportedly his third such move since February.
Musk launches 'America Party' following public feud with TrumpThe Kyiv IndependentAnna Fratsyvir
Musk launches 'America Party' following public feud with Trump
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Moldova's EU future rests on September election, President Sandu says

Moldova's EU future rests on September election, President Sandu says

Moldovan President Maia Sandu said on July 4 that her country's European Union aspirations depend on Moldovan citizens as a crucial September 28 election approaches.

Sandu hopes her pro-European Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) will retain its parliamentary majority, paving the way for Moldova, one of Europe's poorest nations, to join the EU by 2030.

Sandu made her remarks at the conclusion of the 27-nation bloc's inaugural summit with Moldova. Her PAS party faces a challenge from the pro-Russian Socialist Party and its allies in the upcoming election. Sandu secured re-election last year by a narrow margin against a Socialist challenger in the ex-Soviet state, located between Ukraine and Romania. A referendum seeking public backing for EU membership also just barely surpassed a 50% majority.

"Prosperity and peace do not occur for nothing, you have to build them. With collective effort and unity. When citizens are united and choose the correct path and proceed along it," Sandu told a news conference after the summit. "The European Union is already happening here. The only risk is if we stop. If we decide this autumn that nothing will stop us, then everything is possible."

Sandu and her party have condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine and accuse Moscow of destabilizing Moldova. Russia, in turn, claims many Moldovans desire to maintain ties with Moscow and accuses Sandu of fostering Russophobia.

Opinion polls suggest that no single party will likely secure a parliamentary majority. If no majority emerges, pro-European parties would need to engage in coalition talks.

At the summit, which included European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council head Antonio Costa, the EU announced the disbursement of the first €270 million ($318 million) tranche of an Economic Growth Plan for Moldova.

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