In his first Canadian interview since being released in a historic prisoner swap, Vladimir Kara-Murza talks about being imprisoned by Russia for criticizing the invasion of Ukraine.
It has been around six weeks since Vladimir Kara-Murza swapped his prison long-johns and rubber flip flops for sharp suits, but the major opponent of the Kremlin says he is still adjusting to reality.
Russian President Putin said on Thursday that he was grateful to Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for helping to organise the biggest U.S.-Russian prisoner swap since the Cold War.
A leading opponent of Vladimir Putin, freed in a prisoner swap last month, on Monday urged the West against allowing the ...
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia and Ukraine exchanged over 100 prisoners of war each on Saturday ... Officials from the two sides meet only when they swap their dead and POWs, after lengthy ...
President Vladimir Putin is not currently interested in granting an interview to Wall Street Journal reporter Evan ...
THIS is the shocking moment shell-shocked Russian troops walked through a graveyard of tankers blitzed in a devastating ...
THIS is the moment a crack Ukrainian sniper took a clean shot to wipe out two Russian soldiers equipped with grande launchers. Dramatic Call Of Duty-style footage shows the brave Ukrainian soldier ...
Lurking in the bushes near Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine is a unit of men who have two things in common: The short amount of ...
Russia appears to be trying to cut off Ukrainian soldiers around the strategic city of Pokrovsk, a focal point of the war in ...
In a surprising move, Russian President Vladimir Putin thanked Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for his critical role ...
The Ukrainian offensive over the border caught Moscow’s intelligence agencies by surprise, experts say. It wasn’t the first ...