New satellite images showing large numbers of Russians fleeing to Georgia and Mongolia have been released after Vladimir Putin’s order to mobilise hundreds of thousands of reservists for the conflict in Ukraine.
And according to Maxar, which has been tracking the conflict from its satellites, the queue to cross into Georgia stretches for well over 10 miles (16km).
At one point on Sunday, the estimated wait to enter Georgia hit 48 hours, with more than 3,000 vehicles queuing to cross the frontier, Russian state media reported.
The Georgian capital Tbilisi had already seen an influx of around 40,000 Russians since Moscow invaded Ukraine on 24 February, according to government statistics.
It comes amid unconfirmed Russian media reports that the Kremlin might soon close its borders to men of fighting age.
More on Russia
Related Topics:
German officials have voiced a desire to help Russian men deserting military service and have called for a European-wide solution.
Image: The border crossing between Russia and Mongolia at the Khyagt border post. (Pic: Maxar Technologies)
And in France, senators are arguing that Europe has a duty to help and warned that not granting refuge to fleeing Russians could play into Mr Putin’s hands.
Advertisement
However, other EU countries are adamant that asylum should not be offered to Russian men fleeing now – as the war has moved into its eighth month.
They include Lithuania, which borders Kaliningrad, a Russian Baltic Sea exclave.
Its foreign minister, Gabrielius Landsbergis, tweeted: “Russians should stay and fight. Against Putin.”
His counterpart in Latvia, also an EU member bordering Russia, said the exodus poses “considerable security risks” for the 27-nation bloc and that those fleeing now cannot be considered conscientious objectors since they did not act when Russia invaded Ukraine in February.
Image: ‘Aleksander’ has fled Russia for Finland
One person who managed to escape to Finland, told Sky News that those who stay behind and protest face being killed.
Aleksander – not his real name – said: “I have some friends and acquaintances who were on the same wave as me and at the moment they are in Azerbaijan and Armenia and Belarus and some of them are also in the European Union.
“They all understand that it is impossible to make any difference while you are in Russia, to make any good, because soon it will not even be possible to talk about what’s going on even in your own kitchen.
“All those protests which are held in Russia, they are dispersed. Russia is a police state ruled by tyrants, and they will have enough of the police officials, special armed forces, to disperse all citizens.
“If a large number of people takes the streets, they can easily use arms. They already tried those methods in Belarus and we know how it ended.
“The regime will not fall. The regime is strong. They will have enough resources to kill their own citizens. I don’t want to be neither witness nor a participant of these events.”
Ten people accused of cyberbullying Brigitte Macron are going on trial in Paris after allegedly making “malicious” comments claiming the French first lady is a man.
Emmanuel Macron‘s wife has long been the subject of conspiracy theories saying she was born a man named Jean-Michel Trogneux (her brother’s name), and took the name Brigitte as a transgender woman.
Eight men and two women are accused of making posts repeating the claims, as well as others about her sexuality and mentioning the 24-year age gap to her husband as “paedophilia”.
The accused are between 41 and 60 and include a teacher, computer scientist, an elected official, and a woman who presents herself as a medium and advertising executive.
The trial, due to begin Monday, is expected to last two days and comes after the Macrons filed a defamation case in the US this summer over conservative influencer Candace Owens repeating the claims.
The French president has claimed that taking legal action against Ms Owens was about “defending his honour”,
Mrs Macron and her brother won also another French defamation case last year against two women who were initially ordered to pay damages and a fine.
More on Emmanuel Macron
Related Topics:
However, the decision was overturned and Mrs Macron and her brother have appealed to France’s highest court.
Spotify
This content is provided by Spotify, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable Spotify cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.
Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to Spotify cookies.
To view this content you can use the button below to allow Spotify cookies for this session only.
Argentina’s libertarian president, Javier Milei, has won key midterm victories, backed by billions from the Donald Trump administration.
Mr Milei, a close ideological ally of Mr Trump, announced that his party had gained 14 Senate seats and 64 in the lower house in Sunday’s vote, strengthening its presence in Congress.
Mr Trump called the results “a big win” for his ally, praising him for “doing a wonderful job” as his party’s performance exceeded expectations.
“Congratulations to President Javier Milei on his landslide victory in Argentina. He is doing a wonderful job! Our confidence in him was justified by the people of Argentina,” Mr Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
The US leader added that Milei “had a lot of help from us”.
Speaking to supporters in Buenos Aires after the results, Mr Milei declared: “Argentines showed that they don’t want to return to the model of failure.”
He added that the victory would help him push his radical free-market agenda: “Today we reached a turning point. Today begins the construction of a great Argentina.”
More from World
Image: Donald Trump welcomes Argentina’s President Javier Milei at the White House. Pic: Reuters
Mr Milei’s government has managed to cut monthly inflation sharply, from 12.8% before his inauguration in December 2023 to 2.1% last month, while also securing a fiscal surplus.
The Trump administration extended a bailout potentially worth $40 billion (£30 billion) to help stabilise Argentina’s peso. Mr Trump’s support ahead of the vote included a $20 billion currency swap and a proposed $20 billion debt investment facility.
As part of its economic assistance to Argentina, Washington is also considering buying Argentine beef to bring down prices in the US.
That proposal has angered American cattle ranchers, but Mr Trump has downplayed their concerns.
“We’re going to get the price of beef down, and I’m going to make sure the cattle ranchers don’t get hurt,” Mr Trump said.
Image: Argentina’s President Javier Milei celebrates after his party won the midterm election. Pic: Reuters
Building momentum nationwide
The election results showed Mr Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza, winning in parts of the country long dominated by Peronism.
In the Buenos Aires province, a traditional Peronist stronghold representing nearly 40% of voters, La Libertad Avanza narrowly won edged out a win Sunday – just a month after the Peronists had defeated Milei’s party there by 14 points in local elections.
Nationwide, La Libertad Avanza increased its representation in the House of Deputies, the lower chamber of parliament, from 37 to 64 seats out of a total of 127.
Axel Kicillof, governor of Buenos Aires province and the leading figure in the Peronist opposition, has criticised Trump for influencing the election.
He argued that the billions in US Treasury and investment bank support would do little for ordinary Argentines struggling with Mr Milei’s subsidy cuts and an economy forcing businesses to close.
“I want to make it clear that neither the US government nor JP Morgan are charitable societies,” Kicillof said. “If they come to Argentina, it is for nothing other than profit, putting our resources at risk.”
Mr Milei’s push to deregulate the economy and eliminate tariffs earned him strong backing from Argentina’s influential agricultural sector, helping his party secure a decisive victory in Santa Fe Province, a key hub for soybean production and processing.
The president has said he expects a cabinet shake-up after the election that could include members of the centrist PRO party, a frequent ally of the government in Congress led by former President Mauricio Macri.
After 18 months of surviving forced starvation and shelling by the paramilitary group the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the regional capital and symbolic battleground of Al Fashir is on the verge of full military collapse.
On Sunday, the RSF advanced into the heart of the city and captured the 6th Infantry Division of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in central Al Fashir after three days of intensified ground battles.
In propaganda videos shared on RSF social media channels, troops waved their assault rifles in the yard of the garrison and celebrated victory in front of a bullet-ridden wall marked with an emblem of the Sudanese military.
They claim to have taken over the city and completed their military control of the Darfur region.
Image: Propaganda videos showing RSF troops waving rifles in the air in Al Fashir
Sudanese army soldiers, civilian resistance fighters and first responders have denounced the RSF’s declaration of full victory and say battles are ongoing to fend off the city’s capture.
A wedge of military-held territory remains on the western edge of Al Fashir where remaining civilians are squeezed in with troops fighting to push outwards and regain key sites lost to the RSF.
Image: A map showing areas of Sudan controlled by SAF and RSF forces
“I left because all the residents and forces have been intensely concentrated in Al-Daraja Owla neighbourhood. It was too much and people started fleeing,” said aid worker and resident Adam al Rashid, who left Al Fashir on Saturday.
“The RSF was moving people out and attacking others. So many have been killed by gunfire and shelling from battles. It was clear this was coming. The RSF has been advancing on the 6th infantry division for three days.”
Around 5,000 people have fled Al Fashir since 23 October, according to initial assessments by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).
Videos shared on RSF channels show masses fleeing on foot – some filmed by an RSF surveillance drone scattered across a field and others left in long, sombre queues as RSF soldiers yelled at them from inside their trucks.
Other videos show men of fighting age rounded up and kneeling on the ground as RSF troops yell at them, “You are all army”.
Image: Smoke rises in Al Fashir, Sudan
Sources tell Sky News that those fleeing are facing mass arrests and extra-judicial killings on their way out.
There is currently a telecommunications blackout in Al Fashir. An ominous sign that has marked previous takeovers by the paramilitary group, including the city of Al Geneina where the United Nations (UN) accused the RSF of killing 10,000 to 15,000 people.
“I am very concerned about the life of my relatives, the journalists and the doctors inside the city of Al Fashir. All of us saw what happened in Al Geneina and we are scared that will happen in Al Fashir too,” said Mohamed Zakarea, a journalist from Al Fashir who fled the city a year ago after five months of the RSF siege.
“The people are waiting for the Sudanese army – for the war planes and the air drops. If all of this doesn’t happen, then I’m afraid to say that Al Fashir is falling.”