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Russian President Vladimir Putin has met with Ramzan Kadyrov – after rumours about the Chechen leader’s health.

Speculation suggested Mr Kadyrov has been suffering from serious health problems – claims he has rejected.

Alexey Venediktov, former editor-in-chief of Echo of Moscow, previously said the Chechen leader was in hospital with “severe kidney failure” which requires “frequent hemodialysis”.

Read more: Putin meets warlord in Kremlin – war latest

Earlier this month, Mr Kadyrov posted a video on social media saying he was fine and that his reason for travelling to a Moscow hospital was to visit the bedside of a sick uncle.

It showed him walking outdoors in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, urging people not to believe the rumours about his health.

There was some speculation that video was pre-recorded.

The latest footage of him meeting the president – which lasts around four seconds – does not show the Chechen leader’s face.

However, separate images have been released that show a man who appears to be Mr Kadyrov with Mr Putin.

The meeting comes three days after Mr Kadyrov published a video of his teenage son beating up a prisoner accused of burning a copy of the Koran, Islam’s sacred text.

The Kremlin refused to comment on that incident.

Thursday’s short video clip showed the two men exchanging remarks, with no reference to the episode.

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Mr Putin said there was a “positive dynamic” in Chechnya, largely thanks to Mr Kadyrov, who was shown handing him some papers from a file.

The Russian leader has allowed Mr Kadyrov free rein to run the southern Muslim region as a personal fiefdom in return for keeping it stable and loyal following wars in the 1990s and 2000s in which it tried to break away from Moscow.

The 46-year-old has cultivated the image of a ruthless Putin ally – and has been a vocal supporter of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

He has been critical of Russian commanders – and once said Russia should consider using a low-yield nuclear weapon in Ukraine.

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Drone footage shows Russian invasion of Vovchansk as Ukrainian soldiers fight back

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Drone footage shows Russian invasion of Vovchansk as Ukrainian soldiers fight back

Watching a live drone feed, it was possible to make out three people running down a street in a frontline town in northeastern Ukraine.

“Are they Russians?” I asked a Ukrainian soldier, who was also on the ground in Vovchansk and was showing us the footage from a secret location as we spoke to him via video link from outside the town.

“Yes, yes,” said Denys, 42, the commander of a reconnaissance unit.

“They come in groups like this of three to five soldiers.”

Follow war latest: US confirms aid arriving on frontline

Other footage from Monday shared with Sky News appeared to be of more Russian troops inside the town – just three days after Russia launched a surprise assault across its border into Ukraine’s Kharkiv region.

Sky News has verified the location of the images.

“They are advancing in a residential area of Vovchansk and moving into people’s houses,” Denys said.

“This is just the first wave… They’re testing our defences, they’re preparing their artillery. When they completely enter the town, they’ll bring in their reserves.”

Russian troops inside Vovchansk in northeastern Ukraine
Image:
Sky News has verified the location of the images

Denys was speaking from a position where he and his team were operating their drone, hunting for Russian targets for Ukrainian forces to strike.

Asked what their main task was, he spun the camera he was speaking to us on around to let one of his soldiers – he described them as his “fellow hero brothers” – answer.

“We will fight under these difficult conditions by whatever means,” said the serviceman, called Andrii.

“We simply have no other choice because behind us are our homes, our families, our children.”

Russian forces have unleashed a ferocious barrage of fire against the town, using a combination of airstrikes, gliding bombs, armed drones and heavy artillery.

Another feed, shared by Denys, captured apocalyptic scenes of smoke spiralling into the air from multiple impact sites across Vovchansk.

“The town was not prepared for this bombardment,” he said.

Drone footage shows the Russian assault on the border town of Vovchansk, Ukraine.
Image:
Drone footage shows the Russian assault on Vovchansk

Asked how dangerous it was for him and his team, Denys panned around his makeshift base.

“If they target us with a guided bomb… it’ll be a mass grave,” he said, smiling.

Denys had been a senior police officer and then a lawyer before Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Then, like many civilians, he volunteered to serve to defend his country and has been fighting ever since.

But, in an unusual move for a member of the military, Denys has publicly expressed frustration at what he believes was a failure by his own side to ensure Ukraine’s northeastern border with Russia was better defended by landmines and fortifications.

This was despite the Ukrainian military repelling an initial assault by Russia against the Kharkiv region in the first months of the war.

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On Friday “we saw the first breaches of the state border line by enemy armoured vehicles – the initial rush,” he said. “They passed without encountering any mined positions.”

Explaining why he had chosen to speak out about his concerns, he said: “We’re fighting for freedom and truth. We defend our interests, the interests of our state, voluntarily. And we believe that this truth needs to be spoken.”

Having fought to defend Kharkiv once already, Denys said he and his team now “feel some deja vu”.

He added: “It’s shocking. We’re having to defend ourselves again – losing territory and the lives of soldiers.”

He also said, this time around, the Russians were more prepared.

“The enemy prepared their FPV [attack drone] forces,” he said. “They loaded up with an incredible amount of MLRS [multiple launch rocket systems] and artillery.”

As well as capturing images of Russian troops on the ground, the drone footage also showed Ukraine fighting back.

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Russian forces bear down on Vovchansk

One clip was of what Denys said was a group of Russian troops on the edge of Vovchansk, carrying a wounded soldier on a stretcher.

His team relayed the coordinates of the location to another unit. Moments later, what looks to be a Ukrainian strike chugs up smoke in the area of the Russian position.

Read more:
Russia ‘advancing from multiple positions’
Putin seizes chance to hit Kharkiv

As he prepared to fight into the night, Denys had a message for Ukraine’s top commanders.

“Trust your soldiers, your officers. Trust those on the ground. Give them the opportunity, give them help, give them the chance to defend this land,” he said.

“There are many people here who voluntarily came to give their lives for this country. The command should respect them, trust them, and allow them to do their job.”

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Deepfakes and influencers: The digital election in India

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Deepfakes and influencers: The digital election in India

Divyendra Jadoun is proud of his professional alias: the Indian Deepfaker. 

“I know we do deepfakes,” he tells Sky News. “Why would I use something else?”

And Jadoun’s services have been in demand recently, as India holds elections – often billed as the biggest democratic election on the planet.

Deepfakes have been a feature, in some surprising ways. On occasion, they have been malicious. Bollywood actors have been falsely depicted criticising PM Narendra Modi, or endorsing a political party.

Jadoun says: “We received a lot of requests, from November, October. And out of those requests, around 45 to 50% requests were for unethical [deepfakes]. And these are two kinds of requests.

“One is to swap the face of the political leader and put it into some controversial video that might harm his image. The second type of unethical [deepfake] is to create the clone of, the voice of the opponent leader and make him say something that he has never said.”

“This is the first time that we are going to see the deployment of deepfakes on a large scale. Even for us, it’s a new thing.

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“We do not know how much it will impact or whether it will have an impact or not.”

Pic: AP
Image:
Pic: AP

Others point to the low numbers of views those deepfake videos tend to receive, along with the speed at which they get debunked – and say that the impact of deepfakes has been, perhaps unexpectedly, positive.

“There was a fear that deepfake type of things would be more used for adversarial content, whereas what we are seeing is the opposite,” explains Joyojeet Pal, associate professor of information at the University of Michigan.

“The artificially generated content is much more being used by the campaigns of politicians in their own interest.”

Witness the resurrection of M Karunanidhi, a politician who died in 2018. A deepfake of him was created by technologist Senthil Nayagam and subsequently put on the campaign trail, endorsing various candidates.

“We accidentally started the trend with this video,” Nayagam tells Sky News.

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Pic: AP
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Pic: AP

The Indian Deepfaker has worked on another system that shows the potential innovation of deepfakes.

“We are doing a conversational agent where you will get a call in the voice of a leader. It will be saying that I am an AI-generated avatar of this leader, and he will be taking the name of the person,” he says.

“He will be asking ‘What are your local issues in your area?’ or ‘What are your suggestions to the government?’ – and every call will be recorded.

“It will then be transcribed and it will be filtered out based on different questions, so that the government or the political parties can make manifestos or can create schemes according to the problem.”

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From April: Is India’s Narendra Modi popular?

There are still pitfalls. Jadoun is worried about deepfakes spreading through the messaging system WhatsApp rather than the open internet, where they are easier to debunk. WhatsApp is where more traditional misinformation has spread, according to Amber Sinha.

“I think it’s also been early days, in terms of [the deepfake] use case in India,” he tells Sky News.

“There have been other modes of content, for instance, doctored images, Photoshopped images that have been prevalent, particularly on WhatsApp groups, for much longer in India.”

WhatsApp is, for many people in India, simply the internet. Platforms that dominate in other democracies remain niche. Take ad spending on Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram (and WhatsApp, although it doesn’t show ads).

The ruling BJP is clearly dominating, according to the data provided by Who Targets Me. But compare that to US spending.

The US isn’t even holding an election – at least not yet – and it is comfortably outspending India.

And Pal argues that other platforms have now caught up with WhatsApp.

“WhatsApp groups were the big player in the fairly recent elections as well,” he says. “YouTube is either at par or more important than WhatsApp right now.”

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The most novel digital development of this election, he argues, is the emergence of YouTube influencers.

Earlier this month, for example, Curly Tales, a food blogger with more than three million followers, featured the chief minister of Maharashtra on her channel. And politicians have been making concerted attempts to woo influencers across the board.

File pic: AP
Image:
AP file pic

“The most surprising thing about the campaign has been the emergence of digital influencers over professional journalists as the interviewers in the campaigns themselves,” Pal says.

“As opposed to a professional journalist who might be fairly educated about policy and can ask a politician aggressive questions about what is or is not working about their platform, a digital influencer doesn’t have that ability.”

For all the innovation, deepfakes and influencers do perhaps open up an information gap – one where doubt and misinformation can spread, inadvertently or not.

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‘I wasn’t aware’: Far-right regional leader of Germany’s AfD in court for final day of Nazi slogan trial

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'I wasn't aware': Far-right regional leader of Germany's AfD in court for final day of Nazi slogan trial

One of Germany’s most prominent far right politicians is expected to hear if he has been found guilty of using a banned Nazi slogan.

Björn Höcke, one of the leading figures of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, is due in court in Halle for the final day of his trial.

He is charged with knowingly using a Nazi slogan at a rally in 2021, an act which is forbidden under German law.

The trial heard Höcke used the slogan “Alles für Deutschland” (Everything for Germany) at the AfD event in May 2021.

The phrase is associated with the SA or Storm Troopers, the paramilitary wing of the National Socialist party also known as the Brownshirts.

They played a significant role in Adolf Hitler’s rise to power in the 1920s and early 1930s.

The AfD's Björn Höcke marching with supporters

Prosecutors claim he knew the phrase was banned but he told the court he is “completely innocent”.

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The 52-year-old has led the AfD’s regional branch in Thuringia since 2013, the year the party was founded, and is due to lead its campaign in a state election set for 1 September.

It is one of three branches that Germany’s domestic intelligence agency has under official surveillance as a “proven right-wing extremist” group.

At their recent annual general meeting, Höcke told Sky News he believed the legal case was politically motivated.

“I’m seeing something similar in the USA. Donald Trump is also on trial there and he too is being slowed down. He is hampered in all his development opportunities. I think that’s the point. So for me, the whole thing is a political conspiracy,” he said.

Björn Höcke speaks to Sky News' Siobhan Robbins

“But as a former history teacher were you not aware of the Nazi links?” I asked.

“No, I wasn’t aware. It’s a commonplace saying which unfortunately was once burned by the Nazis,” he replied.

He once called the Holocaust memorial in Berlin a “monument of shame” and called for Germany to perform a “180-degree turn” in how it remembers its past.

A party tribunal in 2018 rejected a bid to have him expelled.

Anti-AfD protestors have been gathering outside the court during the trial.

“Together against fascism,” they shouted as the hearings took place.

Protestors against AfD's Björn Höcke outside a courtroom where he is on trial for using a Nazi slogan
Protestors against AfD's Björn Höcke outside a courtroom where he is on trial for using a Nazi slogan

“We must not tolerate slogans that we know are leading us in the wrong direction historically,” Lennard Giessenberg told reporters.

“I hope he gets the maximum penalty and that a sign will be sent,” added Sven.

This case is among a string of controversies facing the AfD.

Earlier this year there were mass protests across Germany after a leaked report revealed some members attended a meeting where the mass deportation of migrants was discussed.

Last month, an AfD aide was accused of spying for China.

Despite this, the party is still second in the polls and many back Höcke.

“Björn Höcke is one of the best and most sincere patriots and politicians we have in this party,” said Eric Engelhardt, a member AfD’s youth wing in Thuringia.

He believes Höcke is exactly what Germany needs.

While a guilty verdict could in theory mean a prison sentence, a fine is a more likely punishment.

The outcome of the trial is unlikely to impact Höcke’s support among the hardcore which seemingly remains undented.

On Monday, a German high court ruled domestic security services could continue to treat the AfD as a potentially extremist party, meaning they retain the right to keep it under surveillance.

The party said it would appeal.

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