Suspension of hostilities
What does Viktor Orbán’s surprise visit to Kyiv mean for the future of the war in Ukraine?

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán made a one-day state visit to Kyiv on Tuesday, the day after his country assumed the rotating six-month presidency of the EU Council. Instead of travelling to the Ukrainian capital by train, as nearly all other world leaders before him had done, Orbán entered Ukraine in a bullet-proof motorcade via its border with Hungary in the Carpathian Mountains.
Instead of leading to a softening of the Hungarian position, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 was seen by Budapest as an opportunity worth exploiting.
“To speak in football terms, I think Orban’s visit was an attempt to win an away game.”


Catch and release
Some of Belarus’s most prominent opposition figures react to their surprise return to freedom

Academic rigour
How Kremlin-backed super-app MAX is gradually being made obligatory in Russian schools

Pounds of flesh
In a gross miscarriage of justice, eight innocent people have been given life sentences for the Crimean Bridge bombing

A voice from the kill zone
One Ukrainian sergeant tells Novaya Europe he is prepared to defend Donbas from Russian forces for as long as it takes

The Old Man and the Sea
How realistic are Putin’s threats to impose a naval blockade on Ukraine?
A cure for wellness
Described as torture by the UN, gay conversion therapy is nevertheless thriving in contemporary Russia

The last party
The Kremlin is taking aim at Russia’s sole remaining legal opposition movement

Influencer operation
A cohort of pro-Kremlin content creators is shamelessly portraying the Russian occupation of Mariupol in a positive light

Special military obligation
How Belarusian political prisoners are being forced to support the Russian war effort in Ukraine


