The Russian city of St. Petersburg plans to equip 8,000 cameras with ethnicity recognition capabilities to monitor its migrant population.
The water-bound fort on an abandoned artificial island in the Gulf of Finland holds an eerie past. Fort Alexander I, also known as the "Plague Fort" near St Petersburg in Russia was built in 1845 as a ...
U.S. President Donald Trump's claim that Ukraine's president is an illegitimate "dictator" aligns with Kremlin war objectives ...
As the Trump administration works toward a halt in the fighting, many experts fear that Ukraine will be forced to accept a ...
A notorious Russian prison complex that once housed jailed revolutionaries, toppled ministers and Soviet dissidents will be ...
Johnson briefly introduced the audience to alternative history by discussing novels in the genre from both a U.S. and Soviet ...
In the ruins of the captured southern city, the Kremlin has opened a tribute to a feared henchman of Joseph Stalin.
And with Zenit St Petersburg reportedly closing in on a deal to sign Zdjelar from their league rivals from the capital to the ...
Officials in St. Petersburg plan to use surveillance cameras to identify individuals’ ethnic backgrounds in an effort to “monitor” migrants. The move has drawn criticism from human rights advocates, ...
A leading Norwegian automotive supplier has exported millions of dollars in sanctioned truck parts that ended up feeding ...
Vladimir Putin has said that normal diplomatic ties have been restored between Russia and the United States. "The constant ...