There is voluminous evidence of widespread persecution of Uighur Muslims and other religious minorities.
A pro-Kremlin analyst called an EU media outlet tracking Russian-state disinformation on COVID-19 the “ministry of untruth.” But there is more than enough evidence showing Moscow’s hand in spreading coronavirus conspiracy theories.
Although China says Indian troops instigated the bloody Himalayan border clash on June 15 , a U.S. commission reports that China may have “planned” the incident.
Dogged by protests since his disputed re-election last summer, the Belarus autocrat is shifting blame to outsiders.
Rossiya Segodnya chief seized on words real and imagined from President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for White House press secretary to preemptively tar his new administration.
Chinese state media has claimed Wuhan is not the origin of Covid-19, even as the WHO investigation into the origin of the global pandemic is just getting started.
A Beijing-based academic has claimed without evidence that Chinese soldiers drove away Indian troops in the Himalayas using a microwave weapon.
Obama didn’t actually write that. In fact, he said Russia lacks the ability to project its military might globally.
Strong evidence suggests China is conducting “demographic genocide” against Uighurs and other Muslim minorities.
While Azerbaijan’s president claims Armenia committed war crimes in Nagorno-Karabakh, the evidence shows both sides ran afoul of international law.
While many states protect leaders from prosecution while in office, few go so far as a Russian proposal that would indemnify Vladimir Putin for life.
The deputy director of a Chinese military academy embraced an unfounded conspiracy theory that the United States is behind student-led protests for reform.
Germany and France have the right to issue sanctions enforcing chemical weapons conventions within their borders.
Amid a controversial political trial, the authoritarian prime minister stirs up talk of U.S.-backed coup to justify suppressing dissent.
With New Delhi suffering from hazardous levels of air pollution, one politician has claimed China or Pakistan may have released “a poisonous gas” over the Indian capital, even as all the evidence points towards the cities smog woes being a homegrown affair.
After the CBS network’s “60 Minutes” program aired an interview with Maria Butina, Russia’s TASS news agency avoided the revelations regarding the convicted foreign agent’s activities and contacts, sticking to disinformation talking points like "torturous" prison conditions and alleged Russophobia.
Russian state media tweeted that the training flight of U.S. B-52 nuclear-capable bombers ended in a “provocation” when one of them simulated a bombing mission targeting Russian-occupied Crimea. However, the plane’s path discovered by a Russian flight tracker suggests the B-52 was not Crimea-bound.
A Russian official claims Maria Butina is being “returned home” as a result of public and government pressure. However, the convicted foreign agent’s release lines up with the conditions of her plea deal.
Stanislav Aseyev is among hundreds held in eastern Ukraine and Crimea, dubbed “Kremlin hostages” by Ukrainian human rights campaigners. His “confession” was aired, in a heavily criticized broadcast, on Russian state TV.
A pro-Russian MEP has asked the European Commission to probe whether several environmental movements are “hybrid threats” possibly being controlled by Russia. And while the letter is seen as an act of trolling, the Russian media attacks on the young climate activist Greta Thunberg are very real.
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