Russian politician and anti-corruption activist
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Le 14 février 2026, le Royaume-Uni, la Suède, la France, l'Allemagne et les Pays-Bas ont estimé qu'Alexeï Navalny avait été empoisonné avec une toxine mortelle. Une reconnaissance majeure pour la mémoire et la justice, deux ans après sa mort en prison. À cette occasion, nous revenons sur l'histoire en 8 épisodes de l'homme qui a osé défié Poutine, au péril de sa vie. Avocat devenu activiste, il dénonce la corruption au sommet de l'État russe et mobilise des milliers de citoyens autour de l'idée que la transparence et la justice peuvent triompher de l'autoritarisme. Mais son engagement attire l'attention de tout un système. Entre campagnes de diffamation, arrestations répétées et tentatives d'assassinat, Navalny devient la cible d'une machine de répression qui ne tolère aucune contestation. De sa lutte pour les élections locales à son empoisonnement en 2020, son parcours révèle les risques extrêmes de s'opposer à un pouvoir tout-puissant. David contre Goliath En 2010, Alexeï Navalny se lance en politique et se retrouve rapidement censuré par les médias traditionnels. Il se tourne alors vers Internet, où son blog et sa chaîne YouTube font de lui une figure d'opposition jeune et charismatique. En 2011, il dénonce ouvertement la corruption et fonde la Fondation anti-corruption, galvanisant les manifestations pacifiques contre le régime de Poutine. Malgré arrestations et intimidations, il persiste, tandis que la mort de son mentor Boris Nemtsov en 2015 le laisse seul face à un pouvoir russe toujours plus répressif. Crédits : Production : Bababam Textes : Clément Prévaux Voix : Anne Cosmao, Aurélien Gouas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 – 08:52)The State of the Union 2026: President Trump Gives Historically Long State of the Union SpeechPart II (08:52 – 13:19)President Trump and the American Character: President Trump's Personal Attacks Do Not Land Well with Americans – But Democrats Made Personal Attacks TooPart III (13:19 – 20:06)President Trump's Clarity Over Biology: President Trump Became the First President to Speak Against So-Called Gender Transition Surgery from the State of the UnionPart IV (20:06 – 24:33)‘These People are Crazy': We are About to Find Out Just How Far Left Democrats are On So-Called Gender Treatments for MinorsPortrait of the week: Gender in schools, election U-turns and the ‘truth' about Navalny by The SpectatorSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
Le 14 février 2026, le Royaume-Uni, la Suède, la France, l'Allemagne et les Pays-Bas ont estimé qu'Alexeï Navalny avait été empoisonné avec une toxine mortelle. Une reconnaissance majeure pour la mémoire et la justice, deux ans après sa mort en prison. À cette occasion, nous revenons sur l'histoire en 8 épisodes de l'homme qui a osé défié Poutine, au péril de sa vie. Avocat devenu activiste, il dénonce la corruption au sommet de l'État russe et mobilise des milliers de citoyens autour de l'idée que la transparence et la justice peuvent triompher de l'autoritarisme. Mais son engagement attire l'attention de tout un système. Entre campagnes de diffamation, arrestations répétées et tentatives d'assassinat, Navalny devient la cible d'une machine de répression qui ne tolère aucune contestation. De sa lutte pour les élections locales à son empoisonnement en 2020, son parcours révèle les risques extrêmes de s'opposer à un pouvoir tout-puissant. Vers une censure totale La chute de l'URSS fait naître un immense espoir, vite brisé par la présidence chaotique et corrompue de Boris Eltsine. L'arrivée de Vladimir Poutine au pouvoir en 1999 signe le retour assumé de l'autoritarisme, de la censure et du contrôle des médias. Face à ce durcissement progressif, Navalny, devenu avocat et père de famille, tente d'éveiller le débat démocratique malgré la répression. Au début des années 2010, convaincu que le pays se referme définitivement, il décide d'entrer en politique, en sachant qu'en Russie, s'opposer au pouvoir a un prix. Crédits : Production : Bababam Textes : Pierre Serisier Voix : Anne Cosmao, Aurélien Gouas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Silicon Bites Ep286 | 2026-02-16 | Britain and four European allies now say Alexei Navalny wasn't just ‘mistreated' in prison — he was poisoned with a rare neurotoxin linked to poison dart frogs. Finally, they're naming it. Some of us always believe he was deliberately killed, but would not have expected that such a rare, expensive and theatrical poison would have been used. It seems that the cruelty and callousness of Moscow is matched by its penchant for theatrical murder. On 14 February 2026, the UK Foreign Office published a statement saying lab work found epibatidine in samples from Navalny's body — calling it “the deadly toxin found in the skin of Ecuador dart frogs.” The UK says it was found in Navalny's body and “highly likely resulted in his death,” and adds: “There is no innocent explanation for its presence.” (GOV.UK)And the UK didn't do this alone. Britain, France, Germany, Sweden, and the Netherlands issued a joint statement: their national laboratories' analysis “conclusively confirmed” epibatidine. They say it isn't found naturally in Russia — which is the point: you don't accidentally pick up a toxin sourced from South American dart frogs inside a Russian penal colony. (GOV.UK)----------SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtainhttps://www.patreon.com/siliconcurtain----------SOURCES:UK Foreign Office statement (14 Feb 2026): “UK confirms Russia poisoned Navalny in prison with rare toxin.” Joint statement (UK, France, Germany, Sweden, Netherlands) on lab confirmation of epibatidine. Reuters (15 Feb 2026): Rubio says US has “no reason to question” European assessment; details on non-signature. AP (14 Feb 2026): summary of European statement, OPCW referral, date of death. The Guardian (15 Feb 2026): UK considering sanctions; Russian embassy rebuttal; Cooper comments.Sky News (14 Feb 2026): timing analysis; Navalnaya's Munich remarks; embassy response framing. Al Jazeera (15 Feb 2026): recap + notes uncertainty over how samples were obtained; Navalny death/MSC timing. The Guardian science explainer (14 Feb 2026): epibatidine effects; expert toxicology quotes. Euronews (14 Feb 2026): summary of allied accusations and MSC context. The Insider (14 Feb 2026): OPCW notification and related reporting context. ----------SILICON CURTAIN LIVE EVENTS - FUNDRAISER CAMPAIGN Events in 2025 - Advocacy for a Ukrainian victory with Silicon Curtainhttps://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extrasOur events of the first half of the year in Lviv, Kyiv and Odesa were a huge success. Now we need to maintain this momentum, and change the tide towards a Ukrainian victory. The Silicon Curtain Roadshow is an ambitious campaign to run a minimum of 12 events in 2025, and potentially many more. Any support you can provide for the fundraising campaign would be gratefully appreciated. https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extrasWe need to scale up our support for Ukraine, and these events are designed to have a major impact. Your support in making it happen is greatly appreciated. All events will be recorded professionally and published for free on the Silicon Curtain channel. Where possible, we will also live-stream events.https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras----------
En esta edición de Chequia en 30': Datos y análisis sobre la Guerra de Ucrania, a cuatro años de su inicio | Un toxicólogo checo nos explica la "tradición" rusa de envenenar a adversarios, con el caso Navalny como insignia.
Avocat devenu activiste, il dénonce la corruption au sommet de l'État russe et mobilise des milliers de citoyens autour de l'idée que la transparence et la justice peuvent triompher de l'autoritarisme. Mais son engagement attire l'attention de tout un système. Entre campagnes de diffamation, arrestations répétées et tentatives d'assassinat, Navalny devient la cible d'une machine de répression qui ne tolère aucune contestation. De sa lutte pour les élections locales à son empoisonnement en 2020, son parcours révèle les risques extrêmes de s'opposer à un pouvoir tout-puissant. Le survivant Alexeï Navalny grandit dans une URSS en fin de course, au sein d'une famille modeste mais stable, attentive à l'avenir de ses enfants. Enfant, il partage sa vie entre Moscou et les étés passés chez ses grands-parents, dans un village ukrainien proche de Tchernobyl. En 1986, la catastrophe nucléaire bouleverse brutalement cet équilibre et révèle au jeune Alexeï l'ampleur du mensonge d'État. La gestion du drame par les autorités marque durablement sa famille et sa vision du pouvoir. Cet événement fondateur façonne sa conscience politique et nourrit, très tôt, sa défiance envers les régimes autoritaires. Crédits : Production : Bababam Textes : Clément Prévaux Voix : Anne Cosmao, Aurélien Gouas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
En esta edición de Chequia en 30': Datos y análisis sobre la Guerra de Ucrania, a cuatro años de su inicio | Un toxicólogo checo nos explica la "tradición" rusa de envenenar a adversarios, con el caso Navalny como insignia.
Bienvenue dans La Traque. Cette semaine, suivez le parcours d'un homme dont le nom est devenu synonyme de courage face à l'un des régimes les plus stricte du 21ᵉ siècle : Alexeï Navalny. Avocat devenu activiste, il dénonce la corruption au sommet de l'État russe et mobilise des milliers de citoyens autour de l'idée que la transparence et la justice peuvent triompher de l'autoritarisme. Mais son engagement attire l'attention de tout un système. Entre campagnes de diffamation, arrestations répétées et tentatives d'assassinat, Navalny devient la cible d'une machine de répression qui ne tolère aucune contestation. De sa lutte pour les élections locales à son empoisonnement en 2020, son parcours révèle les risques extrêmes de s'opposer à un pouvoir tout-puissant. La traque d'Alexeï Navalny raconte comment un homme a transformé la défiance en symbole de lutte. Découvrez cette nouvelle saison prochainement disponible sur toutes les plateformes d'écoute. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
COURAGE! PART 4Tessa Szyszkowitz in conversation with Leonid VolkovHOW TO FIGHT AGAINST PUTIN AND HIS WAR FROM EXILEAfter Alexej Navalny's death in a Russian prison camp in 2024 his Anti Corruption Foundation continues its work against dictatorship from outside the country. Their political lives are closely intertwined: Leonid Volkov was the chief of staff to the leader of the Russian opposition Alexej Navalny. When Navalny died in February 2024 his wife Yulia took over his role to speak up against Putin's dictatorship. Her right hand man, again, is Leonid Volkov, who already managed Navalny's political campaigns at the beginning of the 2010s.Almost four years after the war against Ukraine started Volkov will explain how the Anti-Corruption Foundation continues to influence the Russian public from abroad. How do you conduct opinion polls about Putin's popularity or the support for his war without endangering the Russian respondents? And: How many Russians really support Putin? Spoiler: 10 Percent. 30 Percent are actively against him and the vast majority watches silently until this regime falls. Leonid Volkov will explain the Russian mindset, the scenario for a possible end of Putin's war and his regime.Leonid Volkov is the political director of the Anti-Corruption Foundation, the leading organisation of Russian anti-Putin and anti-war resistance movement, founded by the late Alexei Navalny. Volkov also serves as chief of staff for Yulia Navalnaya, who took over the leadership after her husband was murdered by Vladimir Putin. He was campaign manager and chief of staff for Navalny's Moscow mayoral campaign of 2013 and presidential campaign of 2018. Since 2019 he has to reside outside of Russia. There are 11 politically motivated criminal cases against him initiated by Putin's regime; he's sentenced to 18 years behind bar in absentia.Tessa Szyszkowitz, is an award winning Austrian journalist and author living in London. She writes regularly for Falter, Tagesspiegel and NZZ am Sonntag. Her last book so far was “Echte Engländer – Britain and Brexit” (2018). She is a curator at Kreiskyforum and Distinguished Fellow of Rusi, the Royal United Services Institute. She received a FPA Media Award for Best Story of the Year 2025.
This week, we look into the science behind Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny's death, caused by dart frog poison, and why Russia resorted to such an exotic means of dispatch at all. Also, how cat cancer genomics can provide new insights into human malignancies, and - more with a whimper than a bang - how a dying star skipped the supernova and became an instant black hole. Plus, Barack Obama's stance on aliens sends conspiracy theorists into a frenzy... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Silicon Bites Ep287 | 2026-02-17 | “Bad things are coming for Russia”: Z-Patriot Maxim Kalashnikov goes full doom-monger on the crisis of statehood enveloping Russia. Today's warning siren isn't coming from liberal Moscow, Navalny's team or TV Rain. It's coming from the other side of the ideological trench: the Z-Patriot ecosystem. And one of its loudest, most apocalyptic voices — Maksim Kalashnikov — is now saying the quiet part out loud: Russia isn't just losing momentum in a war, it's sliding into a crisis of statehood.----------SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtainhttps://www.patreon.com/siliconcurtain----------SOURCES:Kalashnikov posts (primary, verified text captures)- Telemetr capture of Roy TV Telegram channel posts dated 17 Feb 2026 (includes “crisis of statehood” + “difficult decisions” list): https://telemetr.me/content/roy_tv_mkTelegram restriction / backlash context (authoritative reporting)- Reuters (11 Feb 2026): Russia's Telegram curbs, backlash, Mironov quotes:https://www.reuters.com/world/russias-curbs-telegram-prompt-concern-about-impact-soldiers-2026-02-11/- The Guardian (11 Feb 2026): Telegram slowdown, “sovereign internet”, Durov statement, milblogger reactions:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/11/russian-crackdown-telegram-app-criticism-soldiers-pro-war-bloggers- The Guardian (9 Feb 2026): Starlink curtailment affecting Russian forces, milblogger quotes:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/09/russia-scrambles-starlink-access-deactivated-elon-musk-space-xApril 1 Telegram-ban reporting / official non-denials- RBC (17 Feb 2026): Baza claim + Roskomnadzor “nothing to add”:https://www.rbc.ru/technology_and_media/17/02/2026/69942e849a7947f5560a652b- Novaya Gazeta Europe (17 Feb 2026): Baza claim + regulator response framing:https://novayagazeta.eu/amp/articles/2026/02/17/russia-to-block-telegram-from-1-april-as-crackdown-on-foreign-owned-apps-continues-en-news- TASS factbox (17 Feb 2026): “no official confirmations” + Duma committee commentary:https://tass.com/economy/2087879----------SILICON CURTAIN LIVE EVENTS - FUNDRAISER CAMPAIGN Events in 2025 - Advocacy for a Ukrainian victory with Silicon Curtainhttps://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extrasOur events of the first half of the year in Lviv, Kyiv and Odesa were a huge success. Now we need to maintain this momentum, and change the tide towards a Ukrainian victory. The Silicon Curtain Roadshow is an ambitious campaign to run a minimum of 12 events in 2025, and potentially many more. Any support you can provide for the fundraising campaign would be gratefully appreciated. https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extrasWe need to scale up our support for Ukraine, and these events are designed to have a major impact. Your support in making it happen is greatly appreciated. All events will be recorded professionally and published for free on the Silicon Curtain channel. Where possible, we will also live-stream events.https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras----------
(00:00:41) France: avec la mort de Quentin D., la gauche radicale en pleine tempête (00:06:37) Mort de Navalny, le poison, l'arme des faibles… vraiment? (00:12:50) Le CHUV au coeur de l'enquête de la mort d'Arafat: interview de Marc Augsburger
Learn language from the news headlines about this story. Two years after opposition politician Alexei Navalny died, European scientists have tested samples from his body. They say they believe he was killed by a poison found in frogs. Russia denies it killed Navalny and says he died of natural causes, but UK foreign secretary Yvette Cooper said there was no innocent explanation for the poison being found on Navalny's body.Find a transcript and worksheet at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/learning-english-from-the-news_2026/260218Try Our World in English - BBC documentaries adapted in simple English: https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/our-world-in-englishFind out about our latest programmes. Subscribe to our email newsletter: https://www.bbc.co.uk/send/u178220599
Two years ago, Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died in a Siberian penal colony. There was an outcry and many suspected foul play, but nothing could be proved. That is until last weekend, when five European countries including the UK announced that they had made a startling discovery: Navalny had been killed with a rare frog poison.How was the poison was identified, how were the samples smuggled out of Russia, and why does the evidence point directly to Moscow?Venetia and Arthur speak to former commanding officer of the UK's Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Regiment and Telegraph columnist, Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, and Dr Gemma Bowsher, Senior Research Associate for the Centre for Conflict and Health Research at Kings College London.Producer: Sophie O'SullivanExecutive Producer: Louisa WellsStudio Operator: Meghan Searle► Sign up to our most popular newsletter, From the Editor. Look forward to receiving free-thinking comment and the day's biggest stories, every morning. telegraph.co.uk/fromtheeditorContact us with feedback or ideas:battlelines@telegraph.co.uk@venetiarainey@ascottgeddes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Navalny, un esotico veleno e una lotta che non muore Giorgia's Vision esce negli USA, con prefazione di JD Vance ed endorsement di Donald Trump L'Angelo della Meloni, un mistero buffo Le divise olimpiche di Milano-Cortina 2026, un regalo di Re Giorgio
Black Barbies with the Beads and other things. Producers for MMO #207 Fiat Fun Coupon Producers Nail Lord of Gaylord Sam S. of Beargrass and Bourblandia DugitUp Preator Porrecca of Peoria Doiceses: Hempress Emily M. Praetor Wiirdo of the not so flat lands Sir Cascadia Booster Producers boolysteedfountain.fm | 2,222 | BAG DADDY BOOSTER! djwfountain.fm | 1,976 Sir Jared of South Burien | 333 fairvoltyfountain.fm | 207 fairvoltyfountain.fm | 207 fairvoltyfountain.fm | 205 NostrGangfountain.fm | 121 NostrGangfountain.fm | 111 Creative Producers: Episode Artwork Eli the Coffee Guy Giggawatt Coffee Roasters Follow Us: X/Twitter MMO Show John Dan Youtube (while it lasts) MMO Show Livestream Rumble MMO Show Livestream Twitch MMO Show Livestream Shownotes: Dan's Sources Erdogan in Addis: Turkey deepens Ethiopia ties What is Turkey's goal in signing agreements with Ethiopia? Russian opposition figure Navalny killed by poison dart frog toxin Ethiopia secretly built a training camp for Sudanese Rapid Support Forces: Report France denies Niger military leader’s claim of orchestrating airport attack Year of the Fire Horse: Can Lunar New Year festival boost China’s economy? IT WAS DELIBERATE: Rubio Exposes the 50-Year Plot Rubio meets with pro-MAGA Hungarian leader Orban ahead of elections | DW News Hungary PM Orbán gives inflammatory speech before April elections • FRANCE 24 English 'Washington does not need vassals, but strong partners,' Rubio tells Europe Takeaways from Marco Rubio's speech to the Munich Security Conference Watch the video: Super Mario in the Euroland FULL SPEECH: Marco Rubio Declares Golden Era of US Hungary Relations with Orban in Budapest | AC14 Is the Franco-German engine still running? | DW News Death of French activist Quentin is a 'turning point' in politics • FRANCE 24 English Erdogan in Addis: Turkey deepens Ethiopia ties What is Turkey's goal in signing agreements with Ethiopia? Russian opposition figure Navalny killed by poison dart frog toxin John's Shownotes AI Colonel Claude Carnival Aggressive Beads WWL Barbie Doll Trouble WWL Cuba Crisis Accelerating in Cuba Culture 764 Report CNN Police Sober Driving Report Elections Bangladeshi Elections Report AJ Olympics Ukrainian Athletes Targeted Misinfo F24 Ethiopia Troop Buildup Eretria and Ethiopia Levant Syria ISIS Strikes ABC Israel Spraying Glyphosate WION Iran Trump Talks Iran ABC Nuclear Micro Reactor Transport Weapons Navy Ship Collision LOCUST used in El Paso Swarm Drones Beef Supply New Beef Imports
I 5 paesi produttori di caffè hanno registrato quasi 60 giorni di caldo in più all'anno, con stress per le piante di caffè e produzione più decimata. Anche per questo il prezzo del caffè è salito del 18% rispetto all'anno scorso. A Ginevra si sono tenuti i colloqui tra Iran e Stati Uniti per un accordo sul nucleare iraniano: sembrano esserci piccoli progressi, ma la situazione nel golfo Persico rimane tesa. A due anni dalla morte di Alexei Navalny, l'oppositore di Putin, diversi paesi europei affermano di avere le prove che sarebbe stato ucciso con il veleno derivante da una rara rana del Sud America. A cura di Giovanni MoriMontaggio: Giorgio Baù Supervisione editoriale: Camilla Soldati Produzione: Giacomo De Poli e Marco Rip Musiche: Luca Tommasoni Puoi scriverci a podcast@lifegate.it e trovare tutte le notizie su www.lifegate.it.
A due anni dalla morte di Alexey Navalny, nuove accuse internazionali riaccendono il confronto diplomatico tra Russia ed Europa, mentre restano i tentativi di riaprire un canale negoziale sul conflitto in Ucraina: oggi summit Russia-Ucraina a Ginevra.
Trump's Board of Peace pledges $5 billion toward rebuilding Gaza, The U.S. military reportedly prepares for potential strike operations against Iran, The UK and its allies claim Russia killed Alexei Navalny using a frog toxin, Marco Rubio outlines his vision for the US-Europe alliance at the Munich Conference, The UK announces further plans to regulate AI chatbots and social media platforms for children, A report says the Pentagon is considering cutting off Anthropic over a safeguards dispute, Bondi Beach terror attack suspect Naveed Akram makes his first court appearance, Warner Bros. reportedly weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount, ByteDance faces backlash from Hollywood over its new AI video tool, A study finds intermittent fasting offers no advantage over regular diets, and a report finds the U.K. gender pay gap will not close until 2056. Sources: Verity.News
Wer Blumen ans Grab von Alexej Nawalny legt, gerät ins Visier der Behörden: Der russische Staat unterdrückt die Opposition mit aller Macht. Unsere Korrespondentin in Moskau berichtet, was Putins Gegnern jetzt noch bleibt. ►►► Lob, Kritik, Themenvorschläge? Schreibt uns: hallo.shortcut@spiegel.de »SPIEGEL Shortcut« – Schneller mehr verstehen. Wir erklären euch jeden Tag ein wichtiges Thema – kurz und verständlich. Für alle, die informiert mitreden wollen. Neue Folgen von Shortcut gibt es von Montag bis Freitag auf Spiegel.de, YouTube und überall, wo es Podcasts gibt. Links zur Folge: Todestag von Kremlkritiker Nawalny: »Wer hier heute zum Friedhof kommt, braucht Mut« Tod im russischen Straflager: Fünf europäische Länder sind sich sicher, dass Alexej Nawalny vergiftet wurde Epibatidin – das Gift aus dem Urwald Antikriegsprotest in Russland: Katja, Ira, Schenja und ihr Kampf gegen Putin ►►► ► Host: Maximilian Sepp ► Gast: Christina Hebel ► Redaktion & Regie: Natascha Gmür, Katharina Zingerle ► Redaktionelle Leitung: ► Produktion: Christian Weber ► Postproduktion: Natascha Gmür, Katharina Zingerle, Christian Weber ► Social Media: Christina Koppenhöfer ► Musik: Above Zero +++ Alle Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier. Die SPIEGEL-Gruppe ist nicht für den Inhalt dieser Seite verantwortlich. +++ Den SPIEGEL-WhatsApp-Kanal finden Sie hier. Alle SPIEGEL Podcasts finden Sie hier. Mehr Hintergründe zum Thema erhalten Sie mit SPIEGEL+. Entdecken Sie die digitale Welt des SPIEGEL, unter spiegel.de/abonnieren finden Sie das passende Angebot. Informationen zu unserer Datenschutzerklärung.
This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 – 11:43)The High Stakes of the Munich Security Conference: This Was Another Historic Meeting for the U.S. Before the Global PowersPart II (11:43 – 16:14)Secretary of State Marco Rubio's Speech at the Munich Security Conference: This Was an Important Speech, and the Globalists Didn't Like ItRemarks by Munich Security Conference (Secretary of State Marco Rubio)Part III (16:14 – 20:12)Is ‘Western Civilization' Past Tense? The American People Must Decide If We are a Continuing Line of Western CivilizationEurope Today Looks Different From the One Trump's Team Describes by The New York Times (Jim Tankersley)Part IV (20:12 – 20:46)There is No Religious Neutrality: A Country's Moral Principles Will Always Be ReligiousPart V (20:46 – 25:05)Russia is Back in Poison Warfare: Five European Countries Release Statement That Aleksei A. Navalny was Killed By Frog Toxin ThatSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
The UK is considering significant increases to its military spending, to three per cent of the public national income within the next three years. The prime minister, Keir Starmer, made the announcement at the Munich Security Conference at the weekend. This would mean additional spending of up to $19bn a year. Also: Supporters of the late Russian opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, have laid flowers at his grave in Moscow while five European countries say they have evidence that Russia poisoned Mr Navalny with a rare toxin linked to the poison dart frog. And why the former US president Barack Obama thinks that aliens exist.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
Headlines: – Welcome To Mo News (02:00) – Rubio Reassures Europe Amid Increasing Tensions with Trump Admin (06:30) – Olympics Updates + Why Norway Crushes The Medal Board (13:20) – Epstein Files Fallout: High-Profile Figures Losing Jobs, Business After Release (23:15) – Russian Opposition Leader Navalny Killed By Toxin Found In Dart Frogs While In Poison (28:50) – Trump Admin Reapproves Weedkiller Linked to Crop Damage and Health Concerns (31:30) – Laundry Lowdown: How To Separate Your Clothes The Right Way (35:20) – GoFundMe For James Van Der Beek Gets Millions (38:30) – On This Day In History (41:15) Thanks To Our Sponsors: – Industrious - Coworking office. 50% off day pass | Code: MONEWS50 – Incogni - 60% off an annual plan| Code: MONEWS – Monarch - 50% off your first year | Code: MONEWS – Factor - 50% off your first box | Code: monews50off – ShipStation - Try for free for 60 days | Code: MONEWS – Shopify – $1 per-month trial | Code: MONEWS – Aura Frames – $35 off Carver Mat Frame | Code: MONEWS
Day 1,453.Today, amid fresh Russian bombardments and reports of Ukrainian counter-operations, we step back to assess the broader strategic picture on the battlefield – and ask what 2026 could bring if peace talks collapse. We then report from the Munich Security Conference, where American voices, including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, set out competing visions for US involvement in Europe, and Belarus warned about Moscow's nuclear expansion. Then we cover President Zelensky's candid remarks, and examine the extraordinary claims from British intelligence that Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was killed with a toxin derived from a frog on the orders of Vladimir Putin.ContributorsFrancis Dearnley (Executive Editor for Audio). @FrancisDearnley on X.Venetia Rainey (Co-host Battle Lines podcast). @venetiarainey on X.Adélie Pojzman-Pontay (Journalist and Producer). @adeliepjz on X.Rozina Sabur (National Security Editor). @RozinaSabur on X.SIGN UP TO THE ‘UKRAINE: THE LATEST' WEEKLY NEWSLETTER:http://telegraph.co.uk/ukrainenewsletter Each week, Dom Nicholls and Francis Dearnley answer your questions, provide recommended reading, and give exclusive analysis and behind-the-scenes insights – plus maps of the frontlines and diagrams of weapons to complement our daily reporting. It's free for everyone, including non-subscribers.CONTENT REFERENCED:Putin's frog poison hit on Navalny reveals his secret chemical weapons (The Telegraph):https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/02/14/russia-killed-navalny-with-frog-poison-britain-reveals/ Kim opens new neighbourhood for families of soldiers killed in Ukraine (The Telegraph):https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2026/02/16/kim-opens-neighbourhood-families-soldiers-killed-ukraine/ Putin ‘moving nuclear missiles' to EU border (The Telegraph): https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2026/02/15/putin-moving-nuclear-missiles-to-eu-border/ Nato will strike ‘deep inside Russia' if Putin hits Baltics (The Telegraph):https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2026/02/16/nato-air-strikes-deep-in-russia-if-putin-hits-baltics/ Poland considers building nuclear weapons (The Telegraph):https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2026/02/16/poland-considers-building-nuclear-weapons-russia/ Ukraine's War of Endurance – The Fight for Advantage in the Conflict's Fifth Year (Michael Kofman in Foreign Affairs):https://www.foreignaffairs.com/russia/ukraines-war-endurance Ukraine struck $100 million Russian Nebo-U radar system in occupied Crimea, General Staff claims (Kyiv Independent):https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-says-it-struck-100-million-russian-nebo-u-radar-system-in-occupied-crimea/ Ukraine's survival still an ‘open question', Kyiv mayor warns (Financial Times):https://www.ft.com/content/a140cba5-d36c-47b7-95cb-57218fa5874c LISTEN TO THIS PODCAST IN NEW LANGUAGES:The Telegraph has launched translated versions of Ukraine: The Latest in Ukrainian and Russian, making its reporting accessible to audiences on both sides of the battle lines and across the wider region, including Central Asia and the Caucasus. Just search Україна: Останні Новини (Ukr) and Украина: Последние Новости (Ru) on your on your preferred podcast app to find them. Listen here: https://linktr.ee/ukrainethelatestSubscribe: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Le Journal en français facile du lundi 16 février 2026, 17 h 00 à Paris.Retrouvez votre épisode avec la transcription synchronisée et des exercices pédagogiques pour progresser en français : http://rfi.my/CRwQ.A
In this raw episode, Charlie Sykes and Matt Lewis rip into President's Day 2026 — calling it a diluted holiday that now celebrates presidential "awesomeness" amid Trump's cult of personality and Putin admiration. They also discuss:— Trump's escalating cult of personality, as dissected in Peter Baker's latest NYT analysis— Marco Rubio's Munich Security Conference speech: A slick Trojan horse for MAGA ideas?— The second anniversary of Alexei Navalny's murder: Confirmed poisoning with rare dart frog toxin, yet Trump shrugs— Trump's aggressive ICE raids backfire spectacularly: Cratering Hispanic support in South Texas— And MUCH more!Subscribe to Matt Lewis on Substack: https://mattklewis.substack.com/Support Matt Lewis at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mattlewisFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/MattLewisDCTwitter: https://twitter.com/mattklewisInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattlewisreels/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVhSMpjOzydlnxm5TDcYn0A– Who is Matt Lewis? –Matt K. Lewis is a political commentator and the author of Filthy Rich Politicians.Buy Matt's books: FILTHY RICH POLITICIANS: https://www.amazon.com/Filthy-Rich-Politicians-Creatures-Ruling-Class/dp/1546004416TOO DUMB TO FAIL: https://www.amazon.com/Too-Dumb-Fail-Revolution-Conservative/dp/0316383937Copyright © 2026, BBL & BWL, LLC
durée : 00:52:24 - Les informés de franceinfo - Tous les soirs, les informés débattent de l'actualité autour de Victor Matet. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
The Kremlin has denied using a dart frog toxin to kill Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in 2024.But Britain and four European allies say they have evidence that points to the use of the forbidden chemical agent.Why did the allies choose the Munich security conference to make this point? And how has Moscow responded to the claims?Gareth is joined by Hamish de Bretton-Gordon - former head of British Army's chemical weapons unit - and defence analyst Michael Clarke to discuss whether Russia wanted the world to know how they carried out Navalny's death and ask should the UK be ready for chemical warfare with Russia?Producer: Tom Gillespie and Emily HulmeEditor: Philly Beaumont
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is 'not above the law' as pressure mounts into Police probe, Russia killed Navalny with frog poison, and are you get into the Olympics after Britain wins 2 golds in a day.
(2.8.2026-2.15.2026) Love sick. Tune in.#applepodcasts #spotifypodcasts #youtube #amazon #patreonpatreon.com/isaiahnews
Bongani Bingwa speaks to Adam Gilchrist for a global round-up of key international stories, beginning with fresh protests across Iran as demonstrators call for regime change and authorities respond with tightening crackdowns. They then turn to Russia following new details and international reaction surrounding the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, before ending on a lighter but awe-inspiring note at the Great Blue Hole off the coast of Belize, one of the world’s most remarkable underwater sinkholes. 702 Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa is broadcast on 702, a Johannesburg based talk radio station. Bongani makes sense of the news, interviews the key newsmakers of the day, and holds those in power to account on your behalf. The team bring you all you need to know to start your day Thank you for listening to a podcast from 702 Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa Listen live on Primedia+ weekdays from 06:00 and 09:00 (SA Time) to Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa broadcast on 702: https://buff.ly/gk3y0Kj For more from the show go to https://buff.ly/36edSLV or find all the catch-up podcasts here https://buff.ly/zEcM35T Subscribe to the 702 Daily and Weekly Newsletters https://buff.ly/v5mfetc Follow us on social media: 702 on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TalkRadio702 702 on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@talkradio702 702 on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/talkradio702/ 702 on X: https://x.com/Radio702 702 on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@radio7See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bongani Bingwa speaks to Adam Gilchrist for a global round-up of key international stories, beginning with fresh protests across Iran as demonstrators call for regime change and authorities respond with tightening crackdowns. They then turn to Russia following new details and international reaction surrounding the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, before ending on a lighter but awe-inspiring note at the Great Blue Hole off the coast of Belize, one of the world’s most remarkable underwater sinkholes. 702 Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa is broadcast on 702, a Johannesburg based talk radio station. Bongani makes sense of the news, interviews the key newsmakers of the day, and holds those in power to account on your behalf. The team bring you all you need to know to start your day Thank you for listening to a podcast from 702 Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa Listen live on Primedia+ weekdays from 06:00 and 09:00 (SA Time) to Breakfast with Bongani Bingwa broadcast on 702: https://buff.ly/gk3y0Kj For more from the show go to https://buff.ly/36edSLV or find all the catch-up podcasts here https://buff.ly/zEcM35T Subscribe to the 702 Daily and Weekly Newsletters https://buff.ly/v5mfetc Follow us on social media: 702 on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TalkRadio702 702 on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@talkradio702 702 on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/talkradio702/ 702 on X: https://x.com/Radio702 702 on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@radio7See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Britain and four European countries said it was “highly likely” that a poison developed from the Ecuador dart frog killed Alexei Navalny, a Russian opposition leader Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In the first half, I look at the latest news about Navalny's death, what a change in the composition of the Russian negotiation team in Geneva may mean, and why looking for a dubious Russian connection in the Epstein case risks missing the real scandal: how powerful people and institutions tolerated what they knew.Then, to answer the larger question—what kind of country is Russia?—I spin off two books: a long view of survey data that charts a hybrid regime's rise and fracture after 2014, and a cultural study that sees Russia as fluid, formed by global flows rather than failing toward someone else's model. Putin's project tries to bank the gains of global capitalism while fencing off its social and political shocks. That balancing act is faltering. Deglobalising Russia has become both strategy and trap.But arguably Russia isn't an aberration; it's an early case of how globalisation scrambles identity, power, and legitimacy. From Brexit to big tech, we're all negotiating the same tides—just with different weather. The books are Paul Chaisty & Stephen Whitefield's How Russians Understand the New Russia (Princeton UP, 2025), and Vera Michlin-Shapir's Fluid Russia: between the global and the national in the post-Soviet era (Cornell UP, 2021).The podcast's corporate partner and sponsor is Conducttr, which provides software for innovative and immersive crisis exercises in hybrid warfare, counter-terrorism, civil affairs and similar situations.You can also follow my blog, In Moscow's Shadows, and become one of the podcast's supporting Patrons and gain question-asking rights and access to exclusive extra materials including the (almost-) weekly Govorit Moskva news briefing right here. Support the show
Listen to Daily Global #News from Grecian Echoes WNTN 1550 AM - Alexei Navalny was almost certainly killed by a poison derived from a rare frog toxin, European governments said - Europeans welcome Rubio's warm words in Munich, others remain cautious-Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos compete for the moon
World news in 7 minutes. Monday 16th February 2026.Today : Navalny poisoning. Germany defence conference. Norway record golds. Ethiopia RSF training, African Union summit. Mexico Cuba aid. Brazil beef. Israel Gaza attacks. Australia Egyptian heist. China fish up.SEND7 is supported by our amazing listeners like you.Our supporters get access to the transcripts and vocabulary list written by us every day.Our supporters get access to an English worksheet made by us once per week.Our supporters get access to our weekly news quiz made by us once per week.We give 10% of our profit to Effective Altruism charities. You can become a supporter at send7.org/supportWith Stephen DevincenziContact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.We don't use AI! Every word is written and recorded by us! We do not consent to the podcast being used to train AI.Since 2020, SEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) has been telling the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi, Juliet Martin and Niall Moore every morning. Transcripts, vocabulary lists, worksheets and our weekly world news quiz are available for our amazing supporters at send7.org. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated daily news in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, TEFL teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they use SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it.Get your daily news and improve your English listening in the time it takes to make a coffee.For more information visit send7.org/contact or send an email to podcast@send7.org
E dopo la morte per avvelenamento di Navalny di cui troverete maggiori dettagli nel servizio di Lorenzo Vita, vi invitiamo a leggere l'editoriale della domenica del direttore del Messaggero Roberto Napoletano, dedicato al difficile momento degli equilibri geopolitici mondiali, quindi partiamo dalla storia che ha commosso l'Italia quella del bimbo che ha bisogno di un cuore nuovo per sopravvivere di cui ci parlerà l'inviata Laura Pace, quindi con l'inviata Michela Allegri ci occupiamo di un caso di cronaca molto preoccupante gli attentati alle linee ferroviarie, per Lo Specchio del Messaggero, l'intervista della domenica, Andrea Scarpa ci racconterà alcuni dettagli sulla chiacchierata con una protagonista della musica italiana e chiudiamo con le olimpiadi invernali e la giornata oggi molto particolare raccontata da Massimo Boccucci.
Stacie Hueter delivers the news on the toxin found in Russian dissident Aleksei A. Navalny's corpse, Norwegian royal family's ties to Jeffrey Epstein, and the extensive abuse endured by Nobel peace laureate, Narges Mohammadi, by Iranian authorities on 2/15/26.
Reino Unido, Suecia, Francia, Alemania y Países Bajos responsabilizaron al gobierno ruso por la muerte de Navalny.
Several European countries, including the UK, have blamed the Kremlin for the killing of the Russian opposition leader, Alexei Navalny. They say his murder was likely carried out, using a poison developed from a toxin in a rare frog. We get reaction to these updates from a friend of Navalny's, alongside on Oscar-winning director who produced a documentary on him.Also in the programme: Mass rape survivor Gisele Pelicot speaks to the BBC about trauma and healing ahead of her memoir being published; and an an exciting paleontological discovery has been made in Costa Rica.(Photo: Flowers lay near a portrait of Russian late opposition leader Alexei Navalny in front of the Russian embassy in Tbilisi, Georgia, February 2024. Credit: David Mdzinarishvili, EPA-EFE, REX, Shutterstock).
The United States prepares for possible weeks‑long operations against Iran as President Donald Trump sends a second aircraft carrier to the Middle East. Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushes unity at the Munich Security Conference, while renewing sharp U.S. critiques of Europe. European allies blame Russia for killing Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, saying tests found a rare toxin from dart frogs in his body. Plus, Rio bursts into Carnival as early blocos pack the streets. Listen to the On Assignment podcast What the world can learn from Aussie kids and the social media ban Listen to the Morning Bid podcast here. Sign up for the Reuters Econ World newsletter here. Listen to the Reuters Econ World podcast here. Visit the Thomson Reuters Privacy Statement for information on our privacy and data protection practices. You may also visit megaphone.fm/adchoices to opt out of targeted advertising. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The UK and allies say tests have shown the Russian opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, was killed by an extremely rare poision found in the skin of Ecuadorean dart frogs. The Russian government has denied any involvement. The US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, has told the Munich Security Conference that Europe must show it shares Washington's values as part of a revitalised transatlantic relationship. Gisele Pelicot, who was drugged and raped by her husband and dozens of other men, has told the BBC she wants to visit him in prison to get answers.
Five European countries are accusing Russia of using a rare poison from dart frogs on Alexei Navalny, which led to his death two years ago. The popular dissident, who had previously recovered from another suspected Russian poisoning, headed an opposition movement against president Vladimir Putin. The announcement overshadowed the gathering of the Munich Security Conference, which has also been a test of western allies relationship with the U.S.Also: Hundreds of thousands of protesters filled Canadian city streets today. Its part of a Global Day of Action -- as Iranian communities call for regime change. Sparked by an economic crisis, the protests began in December but have spread beyond Iran... with the largest held in Munich, Los Angeles and Toronto. It also comes as fears grow over a potential military intervention by the U.S.And: The Milano Cortina Olympics are well underway. But 20 athletes are competing as neutral, not for their home countries. That's because of restrictions that also bar one of the fiercest hockey nations from taking part.Plus: Canada's FIRST Inuit-led university, Olympic newbies, Dating in Hong Kong, and more.
Five European countries say they know how Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died in prison two years ago. AP correspondent Donna Warder reports.
The top news of the day impacting people living in DC, Maryland and Virginia. Today's stories include: Revelations of Navalny's 2024 killing loom large over the Munich Security Conference; the uproar over ICE's killings loom large over the DHS funding lapse.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
durée : 00:09:44 - Journal de 18h - L'opposant russe Alexeï Navalny, mort en 2024 dans des circonstances troubles en prison, a été "empoisonné" avec une "toxine rare", l'épibatidine, par Moscou, accusent ce samedi cinq pays européens, dont le Royaume-Uni, après une enquête conjointe.
durée : 00:09:44 - Journal de 18h - L'opposant russe Alexeï Navalny, mort en 2024 dans des circonstances troubles en prison, a été "empoisonné" avec une "toxine rare", l'épibatidine, par Moscou, accusent ce samedi cinq pays européens, dont le Royaume-Uni, après une enquête conjointe.
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A mini-episode that paying Patrons heard as part of their Twelve Days of Shadowy Christmas bonuses. Forget the cliché that Russians accept power without protest, I sit down with author and analyst Anna Arutunyan to unpack a more complicated truth from her book Rebel Russia: Russia's past is full of uprisings and dissent, yet weak social solidarity keeps those bursts of courage from becoming lasting institutions. When no stable forums exist for bargaining between citizens and the state, pressure builds, revolutions erupt, and the reset button gets slammed—often wiping out the very spaces needed for democracy to grow.The book, Rebel Russia: Dissent and Protest from the Tsars to Navalny, was published last year by Polity Press, in both hardback and e-book formats.The podcast's corporate partner and sponsor is Conducttr, which provides software for innovative and immersive crisis exercises in hybrid warfare, counter-terrorism, civil affairs and similar situations.You can also follow my blog, In Moscow's Shadows, and become one of the podcast's supporting Patrons and gain question-asking rights and access to exclusive extra materials including the (almost-) weekly Govorit Moskva news briefing right here. Support the show
"Bitcoin is a lifeline. It is a money that cannot be shut down. Native money for the internet. But what happens when the internet gets shut off?" Iran's currency collapses 98%, the government kills thousands and cuts every wire connecting its people to the outside world. Uganda shuts down the internet the day before an election. And somehow, hundreds of thousands of people find a way to communicate anyway. What does it actually look like when Bitcoin's promise meets the brutal reality of authoritarian control — and what happens when the very infrastructure it depends on disappears? Check out the original article from the Financial Freedom Report: Financial Freedom Report #104 (Link: https://hrf.org/program/financial-freedom/financial-freedom-reports/) References from the episode Andreas Antonopoulos received the Finney Freedom Prize for the 2016–2020 era. Absolutely deserved. Look up the prize and the trophies Cryptografiti made — they're gorgeous. Bitchat is the peer-to-peer Bluetooth messaging app that hundreds of thousands of Ugandans downloaded when their internet got shut down. Worth knowing about. FEDI went fully open source on January 3rd — Bitcoin payments and encrypted messaging built on the Fedimint protocol. Zeus wallet added support for South Africa's retail QR code standard via Money Badger — making Bitcoin spendable at everyday merchants from a self-custodial Lightning wallet. Torreable is a new tool for publishing censorship-resistant websites as Tor onion services directly from your own computer. Open Sats announced their 15th round of Bitcoin grants, including Braidpool and Dana Wallet. Thor Halverson wrote an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal arguing against just swapping one authoritarian for another in Venezuela. Anna Chekovic did an interview with Unchained about how Bitcoin sustained Navalny's anti-corruption foundation after Russia kicked them out of the banking system. Host Links Guy on Nostr (Link: http://tinyurl.com/2xc96ney) Guy on X (Link: https://twitter.com/theguyswann) Guy on Instagram (Link: https://www.instagram.com/theguyswann) Guy on TikTok (Link: https://www.tiktok.com/@theguyswann) Guy on YouTube (Link: https://www.youtube.com/@theguyswann) Bitcoin Audible on X (Link: http...