惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
V2EX
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
E
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
W
WeLiveSecurity
L
LangChain Blog
雷峰网
雷峰网
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Project Zero
Project Zero
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
V
V2EX - 技术
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
Security Latest
Security Latest
F
Full Disclosure
博客园 - 聂微东
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
S
Schneier on Security
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
S
Securelist
S
Security Affairs
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
S
Secure Thoughts
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
T
Threatpost
IT之家
IT之家
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
量子位
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
H
Heimdal Security Blog
C
Check Point Blog
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG

Economic news

News.az - Latest news from Azerbaijan US-Iran naval confrontation in Hormuz looms over failed Islamabad talks | News.az Russia readies first Yak-130M batch to intercept Ukrainian long-range drones | News.az Moscow and Kyiv trade blame over fresh wave of mutual strikes | News.az Nvidia-backed SiFive hits $3.65 billion valuation for open AI chips | News.az BYD sets Guinness Records, previews new EVs at MIAS 2026 | News.az Russian listed by Memorial as political prisoner goes on hunger strike | News.az US gas prices slide 2 cents to $4.14 a gallon | News.az Pilots' union calls strikes at Lufthansa on April 13, 14 | News.az US military says two of its ships transited the Strait of Hormuz | News.az US has agreed to unfreeze Iranian assets | News.az Malaysia warns of supply shortages as global tensions push up costs | News.az China hospital helps stroke patient walk using mind controlled rehab system | News.az How will Barcelona line up against Espanyol? | News.az China successfully launches test satellite for satellite internet technology support | News.az Iraqi parliament elects Nizar Amedi as country's new president | News.az India raises export duties on diesel, aviation turbine fuel | News.az Lebanese PM delays Washington trip | News.az Sources: Iran's new Supreme Leader has disfiguring injuries | News.az Iraq's Parliament convenes to elect new president | News.az Iran denies U.S. vessel crossed Strait of Hormuz | News.az Microsoft halts all carbon removal purchases | News.az BYD to install 6,000 flash chargers globally | News.az Sirens alert of drone attack from Lebanon in Western Galilee | News.az U.S. warships cross Strait of Hormuz for first time since Iran war started | News.az World Bank and IMF to host 2029 Annual Meetings in Abu Dhabi | News.az Pakistani and Iranian delegations meet for talks in Islamabad | News.az Ships sail through Strait of Hormuz as peace talks begin | News.az Israeli air attacks kill 10 in southern Lebanon | News.az US-Iran negotiations for permanent ceasefire start in Islamabad | News.az Russia and Ukraine conduct swap of 175 prisoners | News.az Pakistani jets sent to Saudi Arabia under defense pact | News.az Hikmat Hajiyev attends Bridge of Peace talks with Azerbaijan and Armenia civil society reps - VIDEO | News.az Azerbaijan evacuates 3,439 people from Iran | News.az Colombia to hike tariffs on Ecuador to 100% in retaliation | News.az Full list: Emirates, Lufthansa cut flights in Middle East crisis | News.az 3.3-magnitude earthquake hits Caspian Sea | News.az Iran leader: US should focus on ‘America First’ policy – not ‘Israel First’ | News.az Iran still holds thousands of ballistic missiles despite losses: Report | News.az Explosions rock Russia’s Tver near oil depot - VIDEO | News.az Netherlands approves Tesla supervised driving system | News.az Guelleh re-elected as Djibouti president | News.az Fuel shortages hit Ireland as tractor protests block roads | News.az Iran enters talks with ‘complete distrust’: Araghchi | News.az New Zealand: Mass evacuations as Cyclone Vaianu nears landfall in North Island | News.az Estonia opens embassy in Yerevan after shifting envoy from Tbilisi | News.az Russia strikes Odesa overnight: 2 killed, homes damaged - PHOTO | News.az Russian court sentences Georgian politician over Ukraine fighting | News.az OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's home targeted in Molotov cocktail attack | News.az 900 tons of diesel sent from Azerbaijan to Armenia | News.az Tesla stock extends 8-week losing streak as earnings approach | News.az Timing of Iran–US talks hinges on preconditions, report says | News.az Sumy hit twice: apartments set ablaze in attack - PHOTO | News.az US loses $200M drone over Strait of Hormuz, shot down by Iran? | News.az NASA turns to SpaceX, Blue Origin for Moon landings after Artemis II | News.az Civilian areas hit in Poltava drone strike | News.az Kuwait airspace closure stretches beyond six weeks | News.az Italian cargo ship blocked from Strait of Hormuz transit | News.az Trump only US president to back Iran strike, Kerry says | News.az Brittney Griner signs major deal with Sun | News.az Why Manon left Katseye — what we know | News.az Fire erupts at pharmaceutical factory in Ankara - VIDEO | News.az JD Vance arrives in Pakistan for Iran talks - VIDEO | News.az Japan boosts Rapidus with $4B chip funding | News.az US intel flags potential China weapons shipment to Iran | News.az NBA chaos: 168 players ruled out in one night | News.az Israel renews strikes on south Lebanon, killing at least 3 | News.az US judge blocks Arizona case against Kalshi | News.az Plane piloted by US Senator Tim Sheehy makes emergency landing | News.az Coachella 2026 kicks off with Sabrina Carpenter | News.az US plane carrying delegation for Iran talks lands in Pakistan | News.az IBM to pay $17M in US DEI probe settlement | News.az Lakers rout Suns to secure playoff home-court edge | News.az Iran says over 125,000 civilian structures damaged in airstrikes - VIDEO | News.az Trump Media board member Eric Swider resigns | News.az China expands footprint in Uzbekistan as Central Asia deepens Beijing ties | News.az Iran delegation warns on preconditions ahead of Islamabad talks | News.az No user data leaked in OpenAI security alert | News.az Victor Wembanyama becomes MVP eligible after 65th game despite injury | News.az PHOTOS from all 10 days of NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission | News.az Artemis II's unprecedented human experiment is just beginning | News.az Cheering crowds gather across California as Artemis II astronauts return to Earth - PHOTOS | News.az Artemis II astronauts safely back on Earth after trip around moon - LIVE | News.az What is the OpenAI security issue and why is it important? | News.az Kyiv charges three with war crimes over deportation of 35 children to Russia | News.az Iran delegation arrives in Pakistan for landmark talks with US | News.az Opening of Strait of Hormuz will be automatic | News.az Netherlands greenlights Tesla's FSD Supervised mode for use | News.az Prince Harry sued by African charity he co-founded | News.az Vance and Bessent questioned tech giants on AI security before Anthropic's Mythos | News.az Morgan Stanley mostly positive on Tesla's Robotaxi | News.az Shocking close call at LAX: Pilot forced to slam brakes to avoid trucks - AUDIO | News.az Brazil places BYD on blacklist over slave-like working conditions | News.az Pakistan hosting US-Iran talks a ‘proud moment’, says PM Sharif | News.az Trump says Iranians have no cards, ahead of negotiations | News.az US budget deficit widens in March as tax breaks boost refunds | News.az China regulates AI human-like interaction services to protect minors | News.az Ali Vaez: Iran-US talks face major collapse risk — VIDEO | News.az Russia trade surplus falls sharply as exports decline in early 2026 | News.az Barcelona seek quick La Liga recovery after Atletico defeat ahead of Espanyol derby | News.az
Russia linked to UK PM arson attacks, BBC reports | News.az
2026-06-16 · via Economic news

Even after he set fire to Sir Keir Starmer’s home, Roman Lavrynovych—convicted on Monday of conspiracy to commit arson—appeared to know little about the prime minister.

His anonymous handler, known by the initials EL, gave a clue in a message: "Look, you attacked the home of a very high-ranking person in Britain. I'll send you money, you need to leave the city," News.Az reports, citing BBC.

It was too late: Lavrynovych was arrested within hours.

The 22-year-old Ukrainian builder had been weaponised to target the UK's head of government. But by who?

Our investigation has found the arson attack was just one part of an extensive campaign of sabotage, provocation and lies leading all the way to the Russian state.

The handler EL, who directed Lavrynovych, offered Russian citizenship in return for other attacks and glorified President Vladimir Putin, messages the BBC has uncovered show.

We have identified evidence suggesting that EL is a young Russian diplomat, schooled in information warfare by spies and propagandists, who is close to the highest levels of power in Moscow. His name is Evgeny Lyukshin. He is 23 and the son of a senior official.

Russian operatives ran their sabotage and provocation campaign remotely through social media and the messaging app Telegram, we found, creating fake online far-right and Muslim groups, which were used to organise acts of vandalism in the UK and stir up division and fear.

Accounts based in Russia posted lies about the motive for the arson attacks targeting Starmer, which were spread by figures such as far-right anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson.

The Russian embassy said: "We reject any attempt to associate Russia or its foreign ministry with unlawful activities."

It said that Russia poses "no threat to the United Kingdom or its people and harbours no aggressive intentions towards Britain".

Lyukshin did not respond to our questions, but hours after contacting him, a propaganda channel we had challenged him on disappeared.

'Work for the glory of the nation'
Ukrainian national Lavrynovych, and Ukrainian-born Romanian national Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, have now been convicted at the Old Bailey of conspiring to target property and a car connected to the UK prime minister.

A third man, Petro Pochynok, 35, was found not guilty of conspiracy to commit arson.

The first fire last year occurred when a Toyota, previously owned by the prime minister, was set ablaze in north London. There were two more arson attacks: one at the entrance to flats where Sir Keir used to live and another at the entrance to his house, which had been rented to his sister-in-law after his move to No 10.

But the trial of the three men was strange, mainly because the true author of the drama was never revealed.

The case focused strictly on a financial motive. The identity, connections and motives of the anonymous handler who offered Lavrynovych money for the attacks were deliberately avoided.

In court, the handler was referred to as "EL Money", which is how he was saved in Lavrynovych's phone, but on the Telegram messaging app he simply used the initials "EL". This app was where EL recruited Lavrynovych, finding him in a group for Ukrainians in London seeking work.

From that innocuous initial connection, Lavrynovych was tasked with actions of escalating criminality, from plastering posters, to graffiti, to arson. Lavrynovych knew he was doing wrong but carried on anyway, hoping to earn a payday.

In court, there were only a limited number of messages from EL, all of them sent to Lavrynovych and Carpiuc, which showed him writing in formal Russian and far less proficient Ukrainian. But we were able to uncover EL's wider activities using open-source tools.

EL's ideology and goals were plain.

Messages from the EL account in various Telegram channels show him glorifying Putin and Russia, attacking the Ukrainian people and promoting Russian narratives.
"It is obvious that Putin is the leader of the white race," he posted in one chat.

EL posted in jobs groups for Ukrainians, asking for "painters to do graffiti" in London - but in other chat groups he used deeply offensive Russian terms for Ukrainian people.

EL incited attacks on conscription centres in Ukraine, which has been at war since Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022. He said that people there who are in favour of the "white Slavic race" should join the "real Third Rome", a reference to the belief that Russia is the successor to the Roman Empire.

"Work for the glory of the nation to spite your enemies," EL added, before offering $1,000 (£749) and Russian citizenship as a reward for arson attacks.

EL also gave hints about his identity, offering Russians in other Telegram groups access to documents from Nato and the CIA. "My father leaks part of it to me, it was not for nothing that he went to Europe," he said.

'This is war'
There was no mention in the trial of what the posters put up by Lavrynovych on EL's orders actually advertised: a purported far-right group called Direct Action UK.

The group sought to appear as an organic British creation. But we found that Direct Action was created online by Russian operatives to cause division among ordinary people in the UK.
Messages sent in the group bore a Moscow timestamp, used Cyrillic letters, and placed pound signs at the end of numbers, rather than at the start - as in Russian.

The accounts that were principally involved in running Direct Action, particularly EL's, were using other channels to promote Russian political goals and using Russian to communicate.

Direct Action first appeared online in autumn 2024, after the riots that followed the Southport murders, and its propaganda exploited images from the disorder.

Its social media channels, which the posters were advertising, featured videos branding Sir Keir a traitor, promoting hatred of Muslims and offering money for violence and arson, including attacks on mosques and police. Direct Action also lionised Tommy Robinson.

"This is war," the group declared.

But, although Direct Action was fake, it generated real-life attacks. In London, six mosques and an Islamic school were vandalised last year after the group offered payment for Islamophobic graffiti.

Slogans such as "remigration" and "Stop Islam" were spray-painted on mosques from Croydon in the south of the capital to Leyton in the east. Direct Action turned video clips of the vandalism into brash social media videos, to amplify hatred and create fear.
The morning after a mosque and primary school had been vandalised by a Direct Action attack in Leyton, EL posted an innocent-sounding ad in a chat group for Ukrainian people seeking work in London: "Part time job today! Leyton District. You need to take pictures of two buildings." He wanted images of the aftermath, so the vandalism could be publicised online.

Even Direct Action's apparent support on the ground was fake and only existed because it paid people to act. When Lavrynovych himself carried out actions for EL he did so for financial reasons, the court heard, not because he shared Direct Action's ideology.

Anti-racist organisation Hope Not Hate investigated Direct Action and reported its concerns to counter-terror police in February last year, months before the arson attacks relating to the prime minister. Hope Not Hate concluded that Russians were behind the group.

The anti-racist organisation told the authorities people behind the group may be grooming UK residents to launch a "terror attack against a mosque or identifiably Muslim target in the UK".

But no-one replied, says Nick Lowles, CEO of Hope Not Hate, which has since worked with the BBC to investigate Direct Action and the people behind it.

Tell Mama, a group which monitors anti-Muslim hate, also passed evidence to counter-terror police and concluded that Direct Action appeared to be a Russian operation. It received an acknowledgement but nothing more from police.

Iman Atta, Tell Mama's CEO, told us she believed such actions are not taken seriously by police, and it was worrying for Muslim communities to see a group offering cryptocurrency to vandalise mosques and create division.
"It's something that is happening online, but it's actually moving directly into criminal damage and criminal acts of violence and terrorism on our streets," she said.

The Met told the BBC it is investigating seven instances of criminal damage as anti-Muslim hate crimes. No arrests have been made and it is "keeping an open mind" whether offences are linked.

Hate leaflets

Before EL began running fake far-right groups, he helped to create a bogus Islamic organisation called the Takbir Foundation.

We discovered this because the username for EL's Telegram account previously bore the name of the fake foundation.

The foundation sought to recruit Muslims to spray-paint "sacred graffiti" in the UK. But its real goal was obvious: to inflame the far right with this vandalism. Telegram accounts that pretended to be those of devout Muslims later switched seamlessly to an aggressive anti-Islam agenda with Direct Action.

In a Telegram group for Muslims, another account called "El" posted that the "Takbir Foundation is dedicated to financially supporting jihad throughout England. O mujahideen, be courageous and extend your hand towards the coming caliphate."

The foundation offered up to £150 for graffiti in one location and said: "this is halal money to promote the word of Allah".
But, just as Direct Action would later pay people who were not really on the far-right, Takbir Foundation offered money to non-Muslims to spray Islamic graffiti.

We tracked down two Bristol graffiti artists who separately responded to an ad by a fake Facebook account with the name "Michael John" for "a paid opportunity with a generous budget", with no reference to Islam.

Both were asked to spray-paint the Islamic shahada - the declaration of faith - in Arabic on a defunct Debenhams in the city centre. One was also asked to spray a Quranic verse about the "devil's handiwork" on a Conservative Club in the city.

They were sent images of the buildings with precise areas highlighted showing where the graffiti was to be sprayed. This was the same approach as EL, who sent similar images of mosques when asking for them to be defaced with Islamophobic graffiti.

The artists were offered payment from the Takbir Foundation, but both refused the work, regarding the requests as illegal.

Another link between EL and the Takbir Foundation underlines how the handler and his fake groups sought to provoke and divide ordinary people.

EL had provided Roman Lavrynovych with an anti-Muslim poster, designed to appear like it had been written by a Hindu by referencing the 1992 destruction of an ancient Indian mosque by right-wing Hindu groups. "Every mosque closed = 100 fewer crimes," the poster said.

Lavrynovych was asked to put it up on a specific road in Southall, west London, which is home to a large mosque, Southall Central Masjid.

It is unclear if Lavrynovych carried out the task. However, we found the Takbir Foundation's Facebook account had posted a photo of the same poster - apparently on a brick wall - in a Muslim community group, claiming it had been plastered up in Southall. "Hate leaflets were found near Southall Central Masjid," the post said.

EL was sowing hatred on the UK's streets - and then his fake foundation was ensuring the message spread to the Muslim community online.

The attack on the prime minister's property was also used for online propaganda.

One lie spread on social media by Russia-based accounts became particularly well-known - that the three Ukrainian suspects were sex workers, with the implication that the fires were the result of a personal sex scandal.

It was all untrue. The suspects did not know the prime minister personally and they were not sex workers. But the lie was taken up by Tommy Robinson, the very person who had been promoted by Direct Action, EL's fake far-right group.

Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, claimed on X that Sir Keir Starmer had been "banging" Ukrainian male sex workers and posted a fake image of the prime minister with the suspects. Putin's special presidential envoy Kirill Dimitriev reposted one of his messages about the case.

'Encourage hate and violence'

These attacks fit the pattern of a wave of Russian-backed sabotage which has hit Europe over the past five years, targeting Ukraine and its allies - from explosions on railway lines to firebombs on planes destined for the UK.

Russia recruits people as "proxies", offering payment to carry out acts of violence, sabotage, and espionage. There can be layers of proxies, making it easier for Russia to deny involvement. In Russia itself, several organisations run such operations, not all of them formally part of the government.

Ukrainians are frequently targeted for Russian sabotage recruitment across Europe. The National Police of Ukraine said that in one Russian network plotting sabotage in 11 countries, including the UK - which was recently uncovered in a joint operation with the EU - a third of participants were Ukrainians.

"It's easier for the Russians this way, because it discredits Ukraine in the eyes of our partners and European countries," said Vitaliy Sova, a senior investigator.

More often, however, it is age rather than nationality that attracts sabotage recruiters, he says. Approached on social media, young people are offered "easy money" for a low-level crime, often masked as innocent tasks, then blackmailed if they try to refuse further actions.

The US has long been a target of Russian hybrid warfare. In one example, it accused a state-controlled media organisation, Rybar, of seeking "to sow discord, promote social division, stoke partisan and racial discord, and encourage hate and violence". Rybar has also been sanctioned by the UK government, which said it uses "classic Kremlin manipulation tactics".

Rybar ran an online campaign called TEXASvsUSA which was designed to look like real activism in the run-up to the last US presidential election in 2024, exploiting the issue of undocumented immigrants crossing the US border.

Hope Not Hate identified the account on Telegram that had created the TEXASvsUSA channel, and found it had also created a series of five UK-focused channels, including one called Radio Southport, which appeared after the riots in summer 2024.

They all promoted a relentlessly bleak view of the UK and spread racist abuse about migrants and Muslims - the same blueprint as Direct Action.

A well-connected Russian in the chat

In the Direct Action Telegram chat group, we identified a member of the Russian elite associated with the ministry of foreign affairs: Evgeny Lyukshin, whose initials "EL" match those of the handler who directed the attack on the UK prime minister.

We found Lyukshin again in a private chat for Radio Southport, the channel created by Rybar. He was also in another chat that glorified the Wagner Group, the Russia-controlled military organisation whose late founder Yevgeny Prigozhin previously funded Rybar.

A picture posted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows him standing behind Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko at a Diplomats' Day event in Moscow in February, where Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov gave a speech.
Another photo he posted on social media placed him in the car park of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Moscow, with another showing his pass for a Russian embassy. A further image showed him posing in a military outfit holding bullets.

Lyukshin, 23, is the son of a senior Russian diplomat, who previously served as counsellor at the embassy in Denmark.

This means Lyukshin's father was in Europe, potentially with access to and knowledge of sensitive documents. This accords with the Telegram post by EL which stated he had access to Nato and CIA documents because his father had been in Europe.

Lyukshin has been training at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), a diplomatic academy controlled by the foreign ministry, where Rybar has a "media school".

In a Telegram group of MGIMO students, which Lyukshin was the administrator of, the BBC has found discussion about "conducting pro-Russian propaganda" as part of the course.

Among the public Telegram groups shared between students was Lyukshin's own "The Lost Britain" group, where he had posted in English calling for taxpayer money to be "diverted" to the NHS instead of being spent on "support for Ukraine".

We found an image, posted on Telegram by Rybar, showing Lyukshin in a group of "future diplomats" who had "trained using Rybar's manuals". His face had been blurred in the photo but we matched his distinctive hoodie to photos from social media showing him wearing the same top.

In the Rybar photo, Lyukshin was pictured with the organisation's director, Mikhail Zvinchuk, who has been sanctioned by the UK and is wanted by US law enforcement for the TEXASvsUS campaign. Zvinchuk is closely involved with President Putin and sits on "special working groups" for the Ukraine war created by the Russian president.

The Rybar course that Lyukshin studied on was part of an entire programme devoted to "information warfare", created two years at the direction of the Kremlin.

It is jointly run by Putin's presidential administration and Andrey Sushentsov, who is sanctioned by the European Union for his close association with Putin and involvement in policies that threaten democracy and security.

The programme is taught by spies and close Putin allies.

One is Andrey Bezrukov, who spent decades as a spy in the West, using the identity of a dead Canadian, before his arrest in an FBI operation in 2010. The lives of Bezrukov and his wife, who also used a stolen identity, partly inspired the TV show "The Americans".

Another tutor is Sergey Nalobin, widely accused of being a spy, who once worked at the Russian embassy in London.

Lyukshin was previously at the prestigious First Moscow Cadet Corps, and images of him in military uniform have been posted online by his family, including one described as being taken in the Kremlin.

We do not know for sure if Evgeny Lyukshin is EL. Lyukshin did not respond when we contacted him setting out the evidence that he is.

But he was in the fake far-right group created by Russian operatives to cause hatred in the UK, his details match EL, he is trained in information warfare, and surrounded by Putin allies.

We set out our evidence about the attacks targeting the prime minister to Ben Wallace, the Conservative former defence secretary and security minister, who was in office during the Salisbury nerve agent attack and the full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

He says the evidence showed Russia conducting a "very deliberate and definite escalation against the British state".

Launching attacks on property linked to the UK prime minister was a change of policy that "would not have just come from a low-level individual, it would have come from the very top", he said.

Cdr Helen Flanagan, head of Counter Terrorism Policing London, said the aim of the attacks was clearly "to intimidate and create fear for the prime minister and to attack the UK". But she said police have not been able to prove the identity of EL or who he was working for, and that "we've got no evidence to suggest that this was a state-backed threat".

However, sources have told us that authorities in the UK and in Ukraine have privately concluded Russia was behind the arson attacks.

Hours after we contacted Lyukshin, mentioning that we knew he was a member of the Radio Southport Telegram channel, that channel vanished.

Four more channels also created by Rybar to stoke hatred in the UK disappeared with it, and the photo of Lyukshin with the deputy foreign minister was taken down by a Russian news site.

News.Az 

By Ulviyya Salmanli