As the conflict in Ukraine's Donbass continues to unfold affecting thousands of people, the EU occasionally steps up its rhetoric aimed at easing tensions. Photo by EPA/BGNES
The European Union decided late Wednesday to impose a travel ban and freeze assets of eleven more people due to their alleged responsibility for the Ukrainian crisis.
The new list is yet to be announced, but leaders are expected to make it public in a few days.
Latest restrictions, reportedly targeting mainly leaders of rebels in Ukraine's east and south and only a few Russians, are likely to be in force from Saturday, website Dnevnik.bg quoted a Brussels diplomat as saying.
The blacklist was expanded following Monday's decision that the step should be taken "in principle".
Until now it included 61 people and two companies that saw their EU assets frozen and were prevented from traveling to any of the 28 EU member states.
EU leaders have repeatedly discussed the possibility to introduce harsher measures against Russian officials and entities in response to what they describe as a negative impacting Kremlin stance on the events in Ukraine.
In a recent interview with "Fakt", Polish President Andrzej Duda made a significant statement, expressing Poland's readiness to permit NATO allies to deploy nuclear weapons on its territory
Opposition parties critical of President Maia Sandu's pro-European stance have joined forces in Moscow, forming a pre-election bloc with ambitions to contest upcoming presidential elections and a pivotal referendum on EU membership
CIA Director William Burns has issued a stark warning, asserting that Ukraine may face defeat in its war against Russia by the end of this year if the United States does not step up its military assistance
EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson conducted an inspection of border control measures at Sofia Airport, marking a significant step in Bulgaria's accession to the Schengen Area by air
Amid escalating tensions on its borders and a significant increase in the Ministry of National Defense budget, Romania is discreetly preparing for the reintroduction of compulsory military service
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced today that Russia will escalate strikes on Ukrainian storage bases housing weapons supplied by Western nations
In a move aimed at bolstering its military forces amid the ongoing war with Russia, Ukraine has announced the suspension of consular services for its male citizens eligible for military service and residing abroad
A high-profile scandal rocks Ukraine's political landscape as Mykola Solskyi, Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food and former Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Agriculture, faces allegations of involvement in an organized criminal group orchestra
A dire situation looms over European airspace as thousands of passenger planes, predominantly ferrying tourists, find themselves ensnared in a perilous web of Russian jamming attacks, leaving them disoriented and vulnerable mid-flight.
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