Voice of Europe accused of spreading Russian propaganda, bribery of EU politicians
The Voice of Europe website, registered in Prague in 2016 under the name "Dada-Mapo," has been implicated in a significant controversy surrounding the spread of Russian propaganda and the bribery of European politicians. According to investigations, the site functioned as a platform for Kremlin disinformation campaigns and was involved in funneling funds to political candidates in several European countries and offering a platform for fringe candidates, in hopes of influencing the outcome of upcoming European Parliament elections in June. The Czech authorities, with the assistance of the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU), uncovered this network which allegedly paid politicians to promote Russian interests. This revelation has triggered a call among Members of the European Parliament for a thorough investigation and has led to sanctions against individuals involved. Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Marchevskyi was granted temporary protection in the Czech Republic as part of European Union efforts to help people fleeing the fighting. However, Czech officials expected him to lose that status 60 days after his inclusion on the sanctions list, depriving him of EU residency. Related:- MEPs call to investigate Russia’s bribery of EU politicians
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