
-
Habeck setzt auf "faire" transatlantische Zusammenarbeit
-
84-Jährige stirbt bei Brand in Seniorenheim in Hannover
-
Wirtschaftsminister Habeck spricht in Washington über US-Subventionen
-
Leichtathletik: Sechs weitere neutrale Athleten aus Russland
-
Mehr als 4300 Tote durch Erdbeben im türkisch-syrischen Grenzgebiet
-
Buschmann will nach Brokstedt Hürden für Abschiebungen senken
-
Saarländischer Pathologe wegen mutmaßlicher Fehldiagnosen erneut vor Gericht
-
EU-Chemikalienagentur stellt Vorschlag zu Verbot "ewiger Chemikalien" vor
-
Zahl der Erdbebenopfer in Türkei und Syrien auf mehr als 2600 gestiegen
-
Stark-Watzinger zu Besuch in Kiew
-
Dritter großer Protesttag gegen Rentenreform in Frankreich
-
Größter Prozess gegen Demokratieaktivisten in Hongkong begonnen
-
Orban wird Stammzellenspender - Einsatz gegen Union fraglich
-
36-Jähriger zündet in Bank Überweisungsträger an und brät Hähnchen darüber
-
Mitbegründer von Atomwaffen Division in den USA festgenommen
-
Elfjähriger nach Unglück mit Schlauchboot auf Lahn gestorben
-
45-Jähriger Angler vor Rostocker Fischereihafen aus Wasser gerettet
-
Warnstreiks bei der Post gehen weiter
-
Habeck hofft auf Annäherung in Streit um US-Subventionen
-
Sepp Maier verteidigt Neuer: "Es steht ihm zu"
-
US-Computerhersteller Dell entlässt weltweit rund 6650 Mitarbeiter
-
Ampel-Koalition will weiteres Migrationspaket auf den Weg bringen
-
Nach Neuer-Interview: Hainer schließt Vertragsauflösung aus
-
Bitterling ist "nicht bange" in Sachen Biathlon-Nachwuchs
-
CDU-Fraktion im Saarland beschließt Untersuchungsausschuss zu Tod von Samuel Yeboah
-
Mehr als 5000 Beschäftigte der Deutschen Post laut Konzern im Warnstreik
-
Anklage fordert lange Strafen im Prozess um Dreifachmord von Starnberg
-
Offiziell: Hoffenheim trennt sich von Trainer Breitenreiter
-
Habeck betont Bedeutung von "fairer" Zusammenarbeit zwischen EU und USA
-
Mehr als 3800 Tote nach Erdbeben im türkisch-syrischen Grenzgebiet
-
Kokain: Staatsanwaltschaft ermittelt gegen Fischer
-
Mehr als 2600 Tote nach verheerendem Erdbeben in türkisch-syrischem Grenzgebiet
-
Zahl von Beschäftigten in Rettungsdienst steigt um 71 Prozent binnen zehn Jahren
-
Auch chinesischer Internetriese Baidu entwickelt KI-Chatbot
-
USA planen keine Rückgabe von Ballon-Trümmerteilen an China
-
EU-Kreise: Selenskyj könnte am Donnerstag nach Brüssel reisen
-
Umfrage: Mehr als die Hälfte liest Arztbewertungen im Internet
-
Unbekannter leitet in Niedersachsen Gas in Tiefgarage von Gericht
-
Aktien von indischem Adani-Konzern fallen nach Betrugsvorwürfen weiter
-
Hilfsorganisationen stellen Soforthilfe für Erdbeben-Opfer bereit
-
AfD-Chef gibt Regierungsbeteiligung als nächstes Ziel der Partei aus
-
Grijseels und Golla zu Handballern des Jahres gewählt
-
Linken-Chefin Wissler übersteht Erdbeben in der Türkei unversehrt
-
Bund und Hilfsorganisationen stellen Soforthilfe für Erdbeben-Opfer bereit
-
Zahl der Todesopfer durch Erdbeben steigt allein in der Türkei auf fast 3000
-
Selenskyj warnt vor Jahrestag des Kriegsbeginns vor symbolischer Aktion der Russen
-
Studie: 600 Milliarden Euro nötig bis 2030 für Erreichen der Klimaziele
-
Aktivisten von Letzter Generation blockieren Straßen in mehreren Städten
-
Fernsehrunde mit Spitzenkandidaten zu Wiederholung von Berliner Abgeordnetenhauswahl
-
Bochums Schlotterbeck: "Warum nicht den BVB schlagen?"

Russian deserter in Oslo ready to spill Wagner's secrets
After fleeing across the Russian border into Norway in a harrowing escape, a former Wagner mercenary could now shed valuable light on the Russian paramilitary group's brutal methods in Ukraine.
Analysts say Andrei Medvedev, who dodged bullets fired by Russian border guards hot on his heels with attack dogs in the middle of the Arctic night, could provide important evidence in war crimes investigations against Moscow.
The 26-year-old crossed the border illegally last week to seek asylum in Norway, dashing across the frozen Pasvik river that divides Russia and the Scandinavian country in the far north.
In a video published at the weekend by rights group Gulagu.net, the Russian says he fought in Ukraine as a Wagner unit commander for between five and 10 soldiers.
He claims he deserted when the controversial group extended his four-month contract against his will in November.
"He's a person of interest, mainly as a first-hand witness within the Wagner Group... including for any future post-war tribunals on the atrocities committed in Ukraine," said Tor Bukkvoll, a researcher at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies.
"He was probably in Bakhmut," a town in eastern Ukraine that Russian troops have been trying to seize for months, he told AFP.
"And he could reveal things from the inside that no one else has been able to speak about."
- Video of Wagner executions -
In an interview with news site The Insider in December, Medvedev said he knew of 10 Wagner mercenaries executed by the group because they refused to return to fight in Ukraine.
He claimed to have in his possession a video showing the killing of two of them, and said it would be published if anything bad ever happened to him.
Medvedev said one of the men under his command was Evgeny Nuzhin, who was accused of surrendering to Ukrainian forces and killed with a sledgehammer by Wagner after he was returned to Russia in a prisoner swap.
AFP has not been able to independently verify Medvedev's account.
Briefly arrested upon his arrival in Norway and then released, Medvedev has or will soon be questioned by both Norwegian immigration authorities and the criminal police (Kripos), which is taking part in an international inquiry into war crimes in Ukraine.
"He claims himself to have been a member of Wagner, and it is of interest to Kripos to obtain more information about this period," police said Tuesday.
Medvedev's Norwegian lawyer, Brynjulf Risnes, told AFP his client was "willing to speak about his experiences in the Wagner Group to people who are investigating war crimes".
- USB sticks -
According to the lawyer, the deserter was carrying several USB sticks on him during his escape to Norway.
"What he has to say is interesting because we don't have a lot of first-hand accounts from Wagner soldiers, but there are two things to take into consideration here," researcher Bukkvoll said.
"Firstly, Wagner's brutality has been notorious for a long time, even before the Ukraine conflict, including in Syria where the group killed prisoners of war," he continued.
"And Medvedev seems to have been of pretty low rank in the organisation and it is therefore unlikely that he will be able to reveal anything about what has gone on in the higher ranks."
Questions have been raised about Wagner's relationship with the Russian military, with numerous observers citing tensions between the two.
Wagner head Evgeny Prigozhin is believed to have political ambitions and is seen as using the group as a rival force to the Russian army.
While Prigozhin recently boasted that Wagner troops alone seized the town of Soledar from Ukrainian troops after fierce fighting, the Kremlin has insisted there is no conflict between it and the army.
Meanwhile, Wagner -- which has heavily recruited soldiers from Russian prisons -- reacted to Medvedev's defection with irony.
Medvedev was given a two-year suspended sentence for theft and ended up serving part of his sentence after a conflict with authorities, according to his Norwegian lawyer.
"He was to be prosecuted for having tried to assault prisoners," Prigozhin said through his press service earlier this week.
"He was until now on the wanted list. Watch out, he's very dangerous".
W.Lapointe--BTB