Putin spokesman's son, Nikolai Peskov 'joined Wagner in Ukraine' - Newstrends
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Putin spokesman’s son, Nikolai Peskov ‘joined Wagner in Ukraine’

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Nikolai Peskov

Putin spokesman’s son, Nikolai Peskov ‘joined Wagner in Ukraine’

The 33-year-old son of Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov says he served with the Wagner mercenary group in Ukraine for nearly six months.

Nikolai Peskov said “it was my duty… I couldn’t sit to one side watching as friends and others went off there.”

Wagner is called a “private military company” in Russia and now has international notoriety for alleged war crimes and other abuses in Ukraine.

It has recruited thousands of convicts from prisons after taking heavy losses.

The BBC was unable to verify his claim about serving with Wagner, whose troops have been engaged in intense fighting for months in Bakhmut.

It is rare for a member of the Russian elite to choose to join the group – many have gone abroad to avoid conscription into the regular army.

Nikolai Peskov is also known as Nikolai Choles, and speaks fluent English, having spent several years as a youth in London. He has worked as a correspondent for Russian state broadcaster RT.

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Both he and his father are under US sanctions.

In an interview with the pro-Kremlin daily Komsomolskaya Pravda, he said it was his own decision to join Wagner, but he did not know how to do it, “so I had to turn to my dad… and he helped me with that”.

He said he used a false ID so that his Wagner comrades would not learn of his Kremlin connections. He did not reveal that assumed name in the interview because, he said, he might need to use it again.

Nikolai Peskov’s claim coincides with a major new army recruitment drive, with Russian state ads urging men to do their “patriotic duty” in the Ukraine conflict.

Tens of thousands of men fled Russia last September to avoid being conscripted, after President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilisation”.

Nikolai Peskov did not reveal where exactly he had served in what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.

In comments to the Russian media, Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin did however give more details.

After joining the group with fake documents, he said, Mr Peskov’s son underwent a three-week training course.

“After that, when he left for Luhansk, it was necessary to expand the combined artillery battalion, and he was sent to join an Uragan [multiple rocket launcher] crew,” Mr Prigozhin said, adding that he “showed courage and heroism, just like all the others”.

According to Mr Prigozhin, Dmitry Peskov had asked him to “take [Nikolai] on as a simple artilleryman”.

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Nikolai Peskov said he received a medal for bravery this year after “all of my team accomplished a feat… We had one interesting sortie – I can’t say more than that.”

Last September he was targeted by a prank live on YouTube, in which he appeared reluctant to join the army.

Journalist Dmitry Nizovtsev, an associate of jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, posed as a military recruitment officer in a phone call to Nikolai Peskov. Speaking in an aggressive tone, Nizovtsev asked him why he had not shown up at a Moscow call-up centre.

Nikolai replied nervously, reminding Nizovtsev that “I am Mr Peskov”.

“I’m going to take this matter to another level,” he said. “I basically need to know what’s going on and what my rights are.”

Mr Prigozhin and some Russian military bloggers have been very critical of Russian generals in Ukraine, accusing them of blunders and under-equipping Wagner. Mr Prigozhin also accused military officials of not recognising his group’s sacrifices.

But last month President Putin outlawed public criticism of Wagner or the regular armed forces. The penalties for “discrediting” any part of the Russian military include prison terms of up to seven years.

Putin spokesman’s son, Nikolai Peskov ‘joined Wagner in Ukraine’

BBC News

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€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas

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Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas

€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas

Thieves exploited the quiet Christmas holiday to break into a branch of Sparkasse Bank in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, stealing at least €10 million, police confirmed on Tuesday.

The suspects drilled through a thick concrete wall to gain access to the bank vault, where they forced open customer safe deposit boxes and made off with the money and valuables.

The crime went undetected until the early hours of Monday, December 29, when a fire alarm alerted authorities to the breach. Most shops and banks in Germany are closed from the evening of December 24 during the holiday season, allowing the robbers to carry out the heist unnoticed.

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According to witnesses, several men carrying large bags were seen moving through the stairwell of a nearby parking garage late on Saturday night. Investigators are also examining reports that a black Audi RS6, with masked occupants, left the garage early Monday morning. The car reportedly had stolen licence plates from Hanover, more than 200 kilometres from Gelsenkirchen.

Angry and anxious customers gathered outside the bank on Tuesday, demanding information about their belongings. One customer, who had used the deposit box for 25 years to store retirement savings, told Welt, “I couldn’t sleep last night. We’re getting no information.” Another reported storing cash and family jewellery in the box.

Police investigations into the massive bank robbery are ongoing.

€10 Million Stolen from Sparkasse Bank Vault in Gelsenkirchen Over Christmas

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Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation

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Audrey Morris and Tesla CEO Elon Musk
Audrey Morris and Tesla CEO Elon Musk

Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation

Tech billionaire and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has come under renewed criticism following remarks he made about the physical appearance of a teenage girl who was facing possible deportation from Denmark.

The backlash followed a post by Musk, 54, on X (formerly Twitter), where he suggested that people who are physically attractive should be exempted from deportation. The comment was made in reference to Audrey Morris, a 19-year-old American student whose immigration status in Denmark recently became a public issue.

Reacting to the comment, Morris described Musk’s remark as demeaning, saying it reduced her case to her looks rather than her personal achievements and life circumstances.

“It’s definitely crazy,” Morris told the Daily Beast, adding that while she was not entirely shocked, she was floored that such a comment came from someone of Musk’s stature.

She said public attention quickly shifted from her academic achievements, volunteer work, and long-term residence in Denmark to her appearance.

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“It would’ve been really cool if he commented on my academic achievements or what I’ve accomplished,” she said. “That would have been helpful.”

Morris noted that although the attention was embarrassing, she hoped it would at least bring awareness to her situation.

The teenager has lived in Denmark since the age of nine after her family relocated from the United States in 2015 for her mother’s doctoral studies. She remained in the country under a temporary residency permit as an accompanying child, which expired in June 2024.

Her immigration troubles reportedly began after she moved into a boarding facility at her high school in another city and changed her address—an action that violated the conditions of her residency permit. At one point, the threat of deportation became serious enough for her to prepare to return to the United States, leaving behind her family and boyfriend.

In a later development, Danish authorities granted Morris a 10-year residency permit, sparing her immediate deportation. However, she was denied citizenship, even as her American mother and 15-year-old brother were granted the status.

“Denmark is my home—one hundred percent,” Morris said in an earlier interview. “I am as Danish as a foreigner can possibly be.”

Musk’s comment, in which he wrote that “8 or above level hotness should get an exemption,” has since drawn criticism from social media users and commentators who accused him of objectifying women and trivialising a serious immigration issue.

Elon Musk Faces Backlash Over ‘Hotness’ Remark on Teen Facing Deportation

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Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry

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Israel to bar 37 aid groups from Gaza

Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry

Israel has announced plans to revoke the licences of 37 humanitarian aid organisations operating in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, a move that has drawn sharp criticism from several Western governments and international humanitarian bodies.

The affected organisations include major international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) such as ActionAid, the International Rescue Committee, and the Norwegian Refugee Council, whose licences are set to be suspended from January 1, with their operations expected to wind down within 60 days.

According to Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, which oversees the registration of aid groups, the decision followed the organisations’ failure to comply with new registration requirements, including the submission of what it described as “complete and verifiable personal details” of staff members.

The announcement triggered condemnation from the foreign ministers of 10 countries, including the United Kingdom, France, Canada, Japan, Norway and Sweden, who described the new rules as “restrictive” and “unacceptable.” In a joint statement, they warned that shutting down INGO operations would have a severe impact on access to essential services, particularly healthcare, in Gaza.

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The ministers stressed that the humanitarian situation in Gaza remains catastrophic and urged the Israeli government to ensure aid organisations can operate in a sustained and predictable manner.

Israel, however, insisted that the move would not disrupt the flow of humanitarian assistance. The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs said aid continues to reach Gaza through approved and vetted channels, including United Nations agencies, bilateral partners and selected humanitarian organisations.

The ministry argued that the licence revocations were necessary to prevent the infiltration of terrorist operatives into humanitarian structures, adding that fewer than 15% of aid organisations were found to be in violation of the new regulatory framework.

Israel’s military coordination body, Cogat, also claimed that the suspended organisations did not deliver aid to Gaza during the current ceasefire, and that their combined contribution previously accounted for about 1% of total aid volumes.

The new framework allows for licence denial on grounds including denying Israel’s existence, denying the Holocaust or the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks, supporting armed struggle against Israel, promoting delegitimisation campaigns, or calling for a boycott of Israel.

In contrast, the Humanitarian Country Team of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which represents UN agencies and over 200 local and international organisations, warned that the registration system “fundamentally jeopardises” humanitarian operations in Gaza and the West Bank. The group said the criteria were vague, arbitrary and politicised, making compliance difficult without breaching international humanitarian principles.

The forum noted that INGOs currently support most of Gaza’s field hospitals, primary healthcare centres, emergency shelters, water and sanitation services, and nutrition centres for malnourished children.

Israel’s Minister of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, defended the policy, stating: “Humanitarian assistance is welcome — the exploitation of humanitarian frameworks for terrorism is not.

Other organisations facing suspension include CARE, Medico International, and Medical Aid for Palestinians.

Israel to Revoke Licences of 37 Aid Groups in Gaza, West Bank, Sparks International Outcry

BBC

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